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Pediatric leukemia, psychosocial dimensions of cures, and implications for HIV

March 8, 2016

Catherine Gliwa, Mary Beth Grewe, Stuart Rennie, Joseph Tucker, Raul Necochea. Published April 2016 in Pediatrics. Although many aspects of HIV cure research in pediatric populations are entirely without precedent, historical examples demonstrate how curative interventions may transform clinical practice and perceptions of disease over time. The history of pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) illustrates … Read more

Susan Lederer

January 11, 2016

The UNC Center for Bioethics and the Department of Social Medicine are hosting Dr. Susan E. Lederer this 2016 spring semester as the 2016 Nannerl Keohane Distinguished Professor at UNC and Duke University. Susan E. Lederer is the Robert Turell Professor of the History of Medicine and Bioethics at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine … Read more

Are skill-selective immigration policies just?

December 21, 2015

Douglas MacKay. Published January 2016 in Social Theory and Practice. Many high-income countries have skill-selective immigration policies, favoring prospective immigrants who are highly skilled. I investigate whether it is permissible for high-income countries to adopt such policies. Adopting what Joseph Carens calls a “realistic approach” to the ethics of immigration, I argue first that it … Read more

Towards earlier inclusion of pregnant and postpartum women in TB drug trials

December 21, 2015

Consensus statements from an international expert panel. Amita Gupta et al., including Anne Drapkin Lyerly, UNC Center for Bioethics. Published 15 March 2016 in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Tuberculosis is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in women of childbearing age (15–44 years). Despite increased tuberculosis risk during pregnancy, optimal clinical treatment remains unclear: safety, … Read more

The empty performative? Informed consent to genetic research

December 21, 2015

John Conley, Jean Cadigan, Arlene Davis. In Discursive constructions of consent in the legal process. In this chapter we analyze the linguistic and discursive aspects of a specialized form of consent: informed consent given by people who contribute DNA samples to genomic biobanks, which are repositories of genetic material and derived data stored for present … Read more

Interview with Mara Buchbinder

November 30, 2015

Mara Buchbinder, PhD is Assistant Professor of Social Medicine at UNC, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Anthropology at UNC, and Core Faculty of the UNC Center for Bioethics. What does Bioethics mean to you? I think that bioethics is a broad interdisciplinary field for engaging ethical challenges in medicine and the life sciences. Why is it … Read more

Interview with Doug MacKay

November 30, 2015

Douglas MacKay, PhD is Assistant Professor of Public Policy at UNC, Duncan and Rebecca MacRae Fellow, and Core Faculty of the UNC Center for Bioethics. What does Bioethics mean to you? I would say it’s the normative and empirical study of ethical questions relating to the practice of medicine, research, and policies relating to health. … Read more

Mosaic features Anne Lyerly’s work

November 24, 2015

Hard labour: the case for testing drugs on pregnant women Traditionally, expectant mothers have been excluded from clinical trials, but could this practice be doing more harm than good? Emily Anthes investigates. When the heart stops beating, minutes matter. With every minute that passes before a rhythm is restored, a patient’s odds of survival plummet. … Read more

Philosophy and psychiatry: Problems, intersections and new perspectives

October 21, 2015

Edited by Daniel Moseley and Gary Gala. Published 2015 September 30. This groundbreaking volume of original essays presents fresh avenues of inquiry at the intersection of philosophy and psychiatry. Contributors draw from a variety of fields, including evolutionary psychiatry, phenomenology, biopsychosocial models, psychoanalysis, neuroscience, neuroethics, behavioral economics, and virtue theory. Philosophy and Psychiatry’s unique structure … Read more