Do ecological preferences belong to patient autonomy? The answer is yes

By Sabine Salloch Healthcare is being increasingly recognized as a major emitter of greenhouse gases in industrialized societies. It accounts for approximately 5 percent of national carbon budgets. Whereas some countries already adopted national climate strategies targeting at a net-zero healthcare other governments still struggle with finding appropriate pathways. This is not surprising as, on […]

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Clinical ethics: looking backwards, thinking forwards

By R Mohindra, S Louw Our paper is primarily an audit of the Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals Clinical Ethics Advisory Group (CEAG). But it has several threads including: The nature of the workflow for the clinical ethics committee including volume and complexity over time; The impact of the relatively recent changes, including principles of approach, […]

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Should artificial intelligence guide surrogate decisions in healthcare?

By Marco Annoni. Artificial intelligence (AI) may soon be able to predict which treatments a patient would prefer to receive—or refuse. Among the many applications of AI in healthcare, one of the most promising is its potential to support substitute decision-making. Substitute decisions are required when patients lack the capacity to make informed decisions for […]

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To succeed as an innovation hub, we need ground rules for ethical use of AI tools

By Sebastian Porsdam Mann, Brian D Earp and Julian Savulescu. Republished with permission from the Straits Times After a severe bout of Covid-19, a colleague, Sumeeta, found herself facing an unexpected challenge. Despite her intact verbal intelligence and reasoning skills, she suddenly struggled with the mechanics of writing. Constructing grammatical sentences and coherent paragraphs now […]

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New threats to LGBTQ+ healthcare and medical education

By Rachelle Monteau, Alexis Dickerson and Katherine Mendis. Recent political developments in the United States have raised alarm that health inequity between LGBTQ+ patients and the general population—already a pressing problem—might worsen.  Some initiatives specifically limit the provision of medical care to LGBTQ+ patients, while those that undermine social equality are also likely to contribute […]

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Would a generational smoking ban create a discriminatory, ‘two-tier’ society?

By Johannes Kniess In the year before the 2024 election, few would have predicted that PM Rishi Sunak’s flagship policy wouldn’t be about taxes or Brexit, but about cigarettes. Under the ‘smoke-free generation’ bill, people born in or after 2009 would never be able to legally buy cigarettes. Those born before that year would remain […]

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