Why Administration Of Lethal Drugs Should Not Be The Role Of The Doctor

By Sally Barker and Zoë Fritz The Westminster Parliament is currently considering Kim Leadbeater’s Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, which would make doctors both gatekeepers and facilitators of an assisted death for eligible terminally ill adults. The legislation proposes that doctors are involved at several stages of the process. Firstly, they must listen […]

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The New Gatekeepers: the role of the UK High Court in the oversight of medical assistance in dying

By Sean R. Riley After decades of unsuccessful attempts by advocates, in November 2024, the United Kingdom House of Commons passed a second reading of a bill permitting medical assistance-in-dying (MAiD). The bill still faces a long legislative road before royal assent, but MAiD may very well be a reality for English and Welsh terminally […]

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Is that what I think like?

By Sankalpa Ghose. What does it mean for a philosopher, or really anyone, to be represented by an artificial intelligence? In creating PSai (available now at www.petersinger.ai), this naturally arises as a curiosity and a consideration. As related in “A Representative Interview with Peter Singer AI” – just published in Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics […]

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Up the creek without a paddle? We can help navigate the consent river in pragmatic cluster randomized trials.

By Cory E. Goldstein, Stephanie N. Dixon, Monica Taljaard, Charles Weijer. As bioethicists and statisticians, we are occasionally invited to consult with a research team planning a pragmatic clinical trial after the research question and a basic outline of objectives and methods have been developed. When the proposed design is a cluster randomized design (in […]

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Should liberal states permit the social use of mitochondrial replacement technique? The answer is yes.

By Marco Tang. What is mitochondrial replacement technique (MRT)? It involves obtaining a donor egg, removing the nDNA from the donor egg, transferring the legal mother’s nDNA into the donor egg and fertilizing it with the legal father’s sperm. This procedure enables women with mitochondrial disease to have children without it. What is unique is […]

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Do philosophers stand in the way of their own philosophy?

By Matti Häyry. I recently interviewed Peter Singer AI – that is to say, philosopher Peter Singer’s digital representation petersinger.ai, created by Sankalpa Ghose and available online. After the interview with the bot, I asked Peter Singer himself what he thought about the answers. His response revealed an interesting tension. For me, the experience was […]

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The GMC must re-evaluate its treatment of climate protesters

By Rammina Yassaie. On 7 January this year, Bristol GP Patrick Hart, was jailed for 12 months for damaging petrol pump screens, which he describes as “an act of care” in protest against continued fossil fuel extraction; the environmental consequences of which are considered to be the greatest health threat of the 21st century. Hart’s […]

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