The hidden cost of miracle cures

By Dr Peter Carter GLP‑1 weight‑loss drugs are promoted as life‑changing treatments. They help people lose weight quickly and offer a sense of control that many have not felt before. But is this view too short-termist? The central issue is durability. These drugs work while people take them, but the benefits can evaporate when treatment […]

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Don’t let AI steal your first thought

By Nguyen Phu Nghia In January 2026, Utah (USA) announced a first-in-the-nation partnership allowing an AI system to support prescription medication renewals for patients, moving beyond suggestion and into direct participation in clinical workflow. Similarly, Mass General Brigham has implemented an AI-supported primary care program in which an AI agent collects patient histories, generates preliminary […]

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Is it unfair discrimination to treat the unvaccinated differently?

By Lydia Tsiakiri and Andreas Albertsen Six years ago, the WHO officially declared the COVID-19 outbreak to be a pandemic. This declaration triggered lockdowns, rapid vaccine development, and a wide range of emergency public health measures. Yet the pandemic also revealed how unprepared societies were to address its practical and ethical aspects. On the practical […]

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Hoping for MAiD

By Maya Ishikura Last March, the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) released a report illustrating their concerns with Canada’s Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) law. Committee Expert, Rosemary Kayess, explained that Canadians with disabilities were seeking MAiD due to unjust social conditions that the state should be addressing. Directing […]

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Two ears, one standard: Why and how bilateral cochlear implantation should be routine care for adults

By Wendy J. Huinck, Simone Naber, Stef Groenewoud and Adriana L. Smit Cochlear implantation (CI) is an effective treatment for severe hearing loss with major benefits for quality of life. Untreated hearing loss has far‑reaching consequences: children with congenital deafness show altered development with long‑term effects on language and speech, while adults who lose hearing […]

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When harm reduction becomes hope: An ethics consult in pediatric innovation

By Alex Gariti Clinical ethics consultation lives at the intersection of medicine and moral uncertainty. It is where abstract principles meet real families, real risks, and real consequences. Sometimes the work is quiet. Sometimes it is wrenching. And sometimes, it is astonishing. Recently, we published a case about a 9-month-old infant with cystic fibrosis (CF) […]

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When IVF goes wrong: why time should matter in deciding parenthood

By Dr. Johnny Sakr Imagine discovering that the child you are raising is not genetically yours. Now imagine discovering that the embryo created for you, your last viable chance at having a biological child, was mistakenly implanted into someone else. These are not philosophical thought experiments. They are real events that have occurred in IVF […]

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