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Mara Buchbinder Awarded NSF Grant

August 15, 2015

Legislative support for physician aid-in-dying (PAD) in the United States has risen steadily in recent years. Five states currently authorize physicians to prescribe a lethal dose of medication to a mentally competent, terminally ill, adult patient for the purpose of ending the patient’s life, provided that certain preconditions are met. With ongoing legislative activities in … Read more

UNC Hospital Ethics Committee posts annual report

August 13, 2015

It is fitting that the release of our annual report corresponds with the implementation phase of the Carolina Value Initiative. The Hospital Ethics Committee (HEC) and the Clinical Ethics Services it supports are representative of the institution’s dedication to the care of its patients and education of its clinicians. The report represents the collective effort … Read more

PHASES Grant Awarded

July 2, 2015

Anne Lyerly and her team receive a notice of award for their NIH R01 grant, Pregnancy and HIV/AIDS: Seeking Equitable Study. The PHASES project aims to develop immediate, ethically acceptable strategies to conducting research on HIV treatment and prevention during pregnancy. PHASES will focus on three specific areas of HIV research in urgent need of … Read more

Mara Buchbinder Selected for Greenwall Faculty Scholars Award

July 1, 2015

Mara Buchbinder has been selected for a Greenwall Faculty Scholars Award for her study, Clinical Ethics, Communication, and Physician Aid-in-Dying. Legislative support for physician aid-in-dying in the United States has risen steadily in recent years: five states have legalized the practice, while six additional states considered proposals in their 2014 legislative sessions. Most of the bioethical … Read more

Published in AJOB: Looking for Trouble: Preventive Genomic Sequencing in the General Population and the Role of Patient Choice

July 1, 2015

Gabriel Lázaro-Muñoz, John M. Conley, Arlene M. Davis, Marcia Van Riper, Rebecca L. Walker & Eric T. Juengst. The American Journal of Bioethics 15 (7): 3-14. Advances in genomics have led to calls for developing population-based preventive genomic sequencing (PGS) programs with the goal of identifying genetic health risks in adults without known risk factors. … Read more

2015 ELSI 2.0 Conference: Translation in Healthcare: Exploring the Impact of Emerging Technologies

June 23, 2015

Eric Juengst kicks off the ELSI 2.0 conference with his talk, Lost in “Translation”. ELSI2.0 aims to encourage international collaboration and discussion around the Ethical, Legal and Social Implications of research in the Life Sciences. ELSI2.0 joins forces with the HeLEX Centre at the University of Oxford to host this interactive and stimulating conference exploring … Read more

REGR: Ethical issues in the research use of electronic health records

May 21, 2015

Research Ethics Grand Rounds. Laura M. Beskow, MPH, PhD, Associate Professor, Duke Clinical Research Institute. The widespread adoption and use of electronic health records (EHR) will make an unprecedented amount of information available for health-related research. Although clinical records have long been used for research, the scope of the information now available, and the scale … Read more

Talk in Hong Kong: What is the moral standing of research animals?

May 19, 2015

Rebecca Walker presents on virtue perspectives on animal research at City University of Hong Kong. Animal research is, and has historically been, a subject of deep moral controversy. Some are adamantly opposed to all uses of animals in research and others are dedicated to research on animal “models” in the service of alleviating human suffering. … Read more

Gabriel Lazaro-Munoz wins K99/R00 Pathway to Independence Award

May 2, 2015

Gabriel Lázaro is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Center for Genomics and Society at UNC-Chapel Hill. Gabriel holds a Ph.D. in Neuroscience from New York University, where he studied the neurobiology of fear-motivated actions and emotional memory. He obtained a J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania School of Law and a Master of Bioethics … Read more

New research ethics grant offered jointly by the Center for Bioethics and NC TraCS

May 1, 2015

$5K – $10K Translational Research Ethics Grant Program. The Translational Research Ethics Grant Program was established to foster ethics-focused research on clinical and translational research practices. Proposals involving qualitative and/or quantitative approaches are welcome. Applicants may request up to $10,000 for one year. More info and application instructions »