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Search Results for: covid-19

  • Page

    Ethical Challenges in the Middle Tier of Covid-19 Vaccine Allocation: Guidance for Organizational Decision-Making

    Download PDF Nancy Berlinger, PhD; Matthew Wynia, MD, MPH; Tia Powell, MD; Aimee Milliken, RN, PhD, HEC-C; Parinda Khatri, PhD; Fatma Marouf, JD, MPH; Keisha Ray, PhD; Johanna Crane, PhD...

    Read “Ethical Challenges in the Middle Tier of Covid-19 Vaccine Allocation: Guidance for Organizational Decision-Making”

  • Page

    Access to Therapeutic and Palliative Drugs in the Context of Covid-19: Justice and the Relief of Suffering

    Read “Access to Therapeutic and Palliative Drugs in the Context of Covid-19: Justice and the Relief of Suffering”

  • Page

    Covid-19 Update: Essential Resources on Immigrant Health

    Updated December 12, 2020 The novel coronavirus pandemic has highlighted the vulnerabilities of low-wage immigrants to viral infection and severe Covid-19 illness. This public health emergency compounds the social (non-medical)...

    Read “Covid-19 Update: Essential Resources on Immigrant Health”

  • COVID-19

    Responding to Covid-19 as a Regional Public Health Challenge: Preliminary Guidelines for Regional Collaboration Involving Hospitals

    Read “Responding to Covid-19 as a Regional Public Health Challenge: Preliminary Guidelines for Regional Collaboration Involving Hospitals”

  • COVID-19 RESOURCES

    Ethics Guidance and Resources on Covid-19

    As communities across the world work to navigate the pandemic, The Hastings Center has assembled ethics resources for responding to novel coronavirus Covid-19. We are updating this hub throughout the...

    Read “Ethics Guidance and Resources on Covid-19”

  • Hastings Center News

    Ethics Guidance and Resources on Covid-19

    As communities across the world work to navigate the pandemic, The Hastings Center has assembled ethics resources for responding to novel coronavirus Covid-19. We are updating this hub throughout the...

    Read “Ethics Guidance and Resources on Covid-19”

  • Page

    Ethics and Pandemic Response

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: Pandemics: The Ethics of Mandatory and Voluntary Interventions Nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPI) such as isolation and quarantine, school closures, and social distancing measures...

    Read “Ethics and Pandemic Response”

  • HASTINGS CENTER REPORT

    Responding to COVID-19: How to Navigate a Public Health Emergency Legally and Ethically

    Lawrence O. Gostin, Eric A. Friedman, and Sarah A. Wetter [This article appears in the Hastings Center Report, March-April 2020] Few novel or emerging infectious diseases have posed such vital...

    Read “Responding to COVID-19: How to Navigate a Public Health Emergency Legally and Ethically”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Nope. A Covid-19 Travel Pass isn’t Just like the Yellow Card.

    Citing the Yellow Card as precedent for Covid-19 travel passes that exempt those with proof of vaccination from testing and quarantine mandates when crossing certain borders is an erroneous policy assumption that could prolong the pandemic and imperil global health.

    Read “Nope. A Covid-19 Travel Pass isn’t Just like the Yellow Card.”

  • COVID-19

    Could the Common Cold Help Stop Covid-19? We Need to Know–Now.

    In an essay published in Scientific American, we call for immediate and intensive research into the possibility that exposure to one of the coronaviruses that cause the common cold could decrease the severity of Covid-19, and could be leveraged to expand what’s been called “pre-existing” immunity to the disease by deliberate transmission of common cold coronaviruses. Here, we expand on our proposal.

    Read “Could the Common Cold Help Stop Covid-19? We Need to Know–Now.”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Is It Ethical to Prohibit Off-Label Use of Covid-19 Vaccines in Kids?

    In a new essay in the Hastings Center Report, we argue it is not. Yet the practice is prohibited.

    Read “Is It Ethical to Prohibit Off-Label Use of Covid-19 Vaccines in Kids?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Should New Mothers With Covid-19 Be Separated From Their Newborns?

    The Covid-19 pandemic has been characterized by many unknowns, chief among them in the world of pediatric ethics is the question of separating mothers who are infected or suspected of being infected from their newborns after delivery to reduce the risk of mother-to-child transmission. Guidance on this issue is conflicting.

    Read “Should New Mothers With Covid-19 Be Separated From Their Newborns?”

  • Hastings Center News

    In the Media: The Hastings Center Responds to Covid-19

    Hastings Center research scholars have been talking with the press and writing on ethical issues raised by the coronavirus pandemic. Here is a selected roundup. Check back for updates.

    Read “In the Media: The Hastings Center Responds to Covid-19”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Ethics and Evidence in the Search for a Vaccine and Treatments for Covid-19

    In the rush to find a Covid-19 vaccine and one or more drugs to treat the deadly disease, concerns are being raised that ethical standards for conducting human clinical trials and the evidentiary standards for determining whether interventions are safe and effective, might be loosened.

    Read “Ethics and Evidence in the Search for a Vaccine and Treatments for Covid-19”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    How Many Covid-19 Deaths Should We Accept?

    President Biden recently declared that the Covid-19 “pandemic is over.”  Some public health experts agreed with this assessment; others disagreed.  What cannot be disputed is that nearly 12,000 Americans have...

    Read “How Many Covid-19 Deaths Should We Accept?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Why We Need a Covid-19 Commission

    Congress recently announced plans for an independent commission to investigate the facts and causes of the January 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. This 1/6 Commission is to be modelled after the 9/11 Commission. A national commission to investigate the disaster that the Covid-19 virus has caused in America must also be launched.

    Read “Why We Need a Covid-19 Commission”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Lessons from Covid-19: Why Treating Sick Patients is Bad Business for Hospitals

    Hospitals in the United States are losing money taking care of patients with Covid-19. The pandemic casts a harsh spotlight on the misallocation of health care resources in the U.S.

    Read “Lessons from Covid-19: Why Treating Sick Patients is Bad Business for Hospitals”

  • Page

    Covid-19 Ethical Framework and Supplements

    Ethical Framework for Health Care Institutions Responding to Novel Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 (Covid-19); Guidelines for Institutional Ethics Services Responding to Covid-19:March 16, 2020An ethically sound framework for health care during public...

    Read “Covid-19 Ethical Framework and Supplements”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Human Challenge Studies for Covid-19 Vaccine: Questions about Benefits and Risks

    Experts in infectious disease and public health warn that the Covid-19 pandemic will be with us until there is an effective vaccine, possibly 12 to 18 months in the future. This situation has given rise to calls for human challenge studies, in which healthy volunteers are injected with an experimental vaccine and then infected with the disease to test the vaccine’s efficacy. Is this ethically justifiable?

    Read “Human Challenge Studies for Covid-19 Vaccine: Questions about Benefits and Risks”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Covid-19 Vaccination Certificates: Prospects and Problems

    Now, with limited distribution of vaccines with varying degrees of efficacy there is renewed interest in immunity passports; more accurately described as vaccination certificates. What remains to be determined is who may use this documentation for what purpose.

    Read “Covid-19 Vaccination Certificates: Prospects and Problems”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Cracks in the System: Lessons Learned from the Covid-19 Pandemic

    The United States leads the world in coronavirus cases and deaths. Although many people have called out the inadequacies of our health care system, Covid-19 has exposed the most significant shortcomings. The need for change can no longer be ignored. Here are three lessons from this pandemic that should be leveraged for change.

    Read “Cracks in the System: Lessons Learned from the Covid-19 Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    The Americans with Disabilities Act at 30: A Cause for Celebration During Covid-19?

    A central mandate of the ADA is to make the goods of society accessible to people with disabilities and overcome their segregation in civil society through reasonable accommodation that allows them to go to work, live with their neighbors, and avoid institutionalization. But let’s not delude ourselves with historic sentimentality as disability law is placed under tremendous stress by the pandemic.

    Read “The Americans with Disabilities Act at 30: A Cause for Celebration During Covid-19?”

  • Page

    Ethics and Public Health

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: Public Health Ethics and Law Public health encompasses what society does to assure the conditions that are necessary for its members to...

    Read “Ethics and Public Health”

  • Hastings Center News

    Ethics Guidance Released on Access to Drugs in COVID-19 Response

    Read “Ethics Guidance Released on Access to Drugs in COVID-19 Response”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Denying Ventilators to Covid-19 Patients with Prior DNR Orders is Unethical

    Previously-stated DNR status would seem irrelevant to ventilator allocation, and yet some existing and proposed guidelines for triage during a public health emergency list DNR status in the list of criteria for excluding patients from getting ventilators or other life-saving health care. This approach is in direct opposition to the generally agreed-upon goal of maximizing the number of survivors, and could result in confusion and public mistrust of the health care system.

    Read “Denying Ventilators to Covid-19 Patients with Prior DNR Orders is Unethical”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Efficacy is Relative in a Public Health Crisis: Evaluating the Next Wave of Covid-19 Vaccines

    A third Covid vaccine candidate moving closer to potential FDA authorization is less effective than the two Covid vaccines already authorized in the United States. Is it ethical to offer a vaccine with lower efficacy? Is it ethical not to offer it in a public health emergency?

    Read “Efficacy is Relative in a Public Health Crisis: Evaluating the Next Wave of Covid-19 Vaccines”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Clinical Trials vs. Right to Try: Ethical Use of Chloroquine for Covid-19

    Double-blind randomized clinical trials are the gold standard for answering the scientific question of whether a drug produces any effect, positive or negative, in Covid-19 patients. But is rational for a patient to choose to try a drug such as chloroquine for Covid-19 outside of a trial? Some patients may correctly hold that they have little to lose.

    Read “Clinical Trials vs. Right to Try: Ethical Use of Chloroquine for Covid-19”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Fear of Doing Too Much Too Soon or Too Little Too Late: Research on Covid-19

    The Covid-19 pandemic has significantly affected the practice of clinical research. Researchers and IRBs have felt an urgency to respond more quickly than usual, aware that lives are at stake.

    Read “Fear of Doing Too Much Too Soon or Too Little Too Late: Research on Covid-19”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Why Health Care Workers Should Receive Priority Care for Covid-19

    The Covid-19 pandemic has imposed tremendous risk on doctors, nurses, and other health care workers not seen in a century. It is time to reconsider prioritization of health care workers’ access to scare critical resources. Historically, for multiple reasons, health care workers have not been prioritized for access to medical care during a pandemic. However, given the unprecedented circumstances surrounding the Covid-19 pandemic, it is justifiable to prioritize health care workers when all else is equal between two patients.

    Read “Why Health Care Workers Should Receive Priority Care for Covid-19”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Immigrants, Health Inequities, and Social Citizenship in Covid-19 Response and Recovery

    Read “Immigrants, Health Inequities, and Social Citizenship in Covid-19 Response and Recovery”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Should We Enroll Our Child in a Covid-19 Vaccine Trial?

    My partner and I are thinking a lot about this question. Moderna and Pfizer trials are running in our community–at the children’s hospital where I work as a clinical ethicist....

    Read “Should We Enroll Our Child in a Covid-19 Vaccine Trial?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Covid-19 Makes Clear that Bioethics Must Confront Health Disparities

    With some reluctance, I’ve come to the sad realization the COVID-19 pandemic has been a stress test for bioethics, a field of study that intersects medicine, law, the humanities and the social sciences. As both a physician and medical ethicist, I arrived at this conclusion after spending months at what was once the epicenter of the pandemic: New York City. I was overseeing a 24/7 bioethics consultation service.

    Read “Covid-19 Makes Clear that Bioethics Must Confront Health Disparities”

  • Page

    Covid-19 Ethical Framework and Supplements

    Ethical Framework for Health Care Institutions Responding to Novel Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 (Covid-19); Guidelines for Institutional Ethics Services Responding to Covid-19, March 16, 2020, https://www.thehastingscenter.org/ethicalframeworkcovid19/. Responding to Covid-19 as a Regional...

    Read “Covid-19 Ethical Framework and Supplements”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Why I Support Age-Related Rationing of Ventilators for Covid-19 Patients

    As a 71-year-old bioethicist, I consider rationing mechanical ventilation based on age to be one morally relevant criterion during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Read “Why I Support Age-Related Rationing of Ventilators for Covid-19 Patients”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Diversity and Solidarity in Response to Covid-19

    Covid-19 imposes burdens in different—but very serious—ways on different individuals and groups. We see it in policies that address what to do in the face of shortages of scarce resources. We begin by challenging a common claim—that people with disabilities as a group will be harmed by triage policies that consider patients’ prospect of medical benefit.

    Read “Diversity and Solidarity in Response to Covid-19”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Show Me Your Passport: Ethical Concerns About Covid-19 Antibody Testing as Key to Reopening Public Life

    Around the world, governments are looking for safe ways to lift unprecedented restrictions on public activities to curb the spread of Covid-19. So-called immunity passports could be key to the effort to selectively ease restrictions for people presumed to be immune to the virus. But there are scientific and ethical questions to be worked out before they can be deployed. .

    Read “Show Me Your Passport: Ethical Concerns About Covid-19 Antibody Testing as Key to Reopening Public Life”

  • Hastings Center News

    The Hastings Center Produces Guidance for Ethical Practice in Responding to COVID-19

    The Hastings Center has developed a resource for health care institutions and institutional ethics services to support leadership and practice during the novel coronavirus public health emergency and in the care of patients with COVID-19.The Hastings Center convened an expert advisory group to meet the need for a practical resource to support institutional preparedness and supplement public health and clinical practice guidance on COVID-19.

    Read “The Hastings Center Produces Guidance for Ethical Practice in Responding to COVID-19”

  • Page

    Disaster Planning and Bioethics

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: Disaster Planning and Public Health Bioethics Briefing A public health emergency exists when the health consequences of a decision have the potential...

    Read “Disaster Planning and Bioethics”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Covid-19 in Argentina and the Abuse of Bioethics

    Many Latin American countries are being devastated by excessive loss of life from Covid-19, many sectors of society falling below the poverty line, and health systems being overwhelmed. As collateral damage, some countries in the region are witnessing an eruption of populism and autocratic trends and an increasing erosion of already weak and unstable democracies. Can bioethics be a useful tool for managing this crisis? Argentina provides a case study.

    Read “Covid-19 in Argentina and the Abuse of Bioethics”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Undocumented Immigrants and Covid-19 Vaccination

    Willingness to be vaccinated is not the only factor that may reduce vaccination rates. Fear is a powerful deterrent for individuals in hidden populations, especially undocumented immigrants. Even if their work or other circumstances place them at high risk of infection, many would be unlikely to risk the consequences of coming forward to be vaccinated.

    Read “Undocumented Immigrants and Covid-19 Vaccination”

  • HASTINGS CENTER REPORT

    Scarcity in the Covid-19 Pandemic

    Read “Scarcity in the Covid-19 Pandemic”

  • COVID-19

    COVID-19: Supporting Ethical Care and Responding to Moral Distress in a Public Health Emergency

    Read “COVID-19: Supporting Ethical Care and Responding to Moral Distress in a Public Health Emergency”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Lawsuits of Last Resort: Employees Fight for Safe Workplaces during Covid-19

    As more workplaces open up, a seldom-used legal action is being taken against employers charged with inadequately protecting employees from the coronavirus: public nuisance lawsuits.

    Read “Lawsuits of Last Resort: Employees Fight for Safe Workplaces during Covid-19”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Covid-19 Underscores Racial Disparity in Advance Directives

    Older black Americans are half as likely as older whites to have advanced directives. My patient, a black man in his 70s,, first made his wishes known when he was in the hospital with Covid-19.

    Read “Covid-19 Underscores Racial Disparity in Advance Directives”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Quality of Life? Suffering? Covid-19 Intensifies Challenges in Discussing Life-Sustaining Treatment

    The pandemic magnified the inherent difficulty and stress of conversations involving life-sustaining treatment by forcing clinicians and patients to engage in life-altering discussions via telephone and video conference, restricting nonverbal communication and eye contact, and eliminating the benefit of simply having another person nearby in time of crisis.

    Read “Quality of Life? Suffering? Covid-19 Intensifies Challenges in Discussing Life-Sustaining Treatment”

  • Page

    Transcript | Vaccine Access, Vaccine Hesitancy: Challenges to Herd Immunity

    A HASTINGS CENTER CONVERSATION WITH RHEA BOYD, MAYA GOLDENBERG, AND MILDRED SOLOMON The Hastings Center hosted “Vaccine Access, Vaccine Hesitancy: Challenges to Herd Immunity,” an online discussion of the ethical issues related...

    Read “Transcript | Vaccine Access, Vaccine Hesitancy: Challenges to Herd Immunity”

  • From Our Journals

    Pregnant Women in Trials of Covid-19: A Critical Time to Consider Ethical Frameworks of Inclusion in Clinical Trials

    Read “Pregnant Women in Trials of Covid-19: A Critical Time to Consider Ethical Frameworks of Inclusion in Clinical Trials”

  • From Our Journals

    Advantages of Using Lotteries to Select Participants for High-Demand Covid-19 Treatment Trials

    Read “Advantages of Using Lotteries to Select Participants for High-Demand Covid-19 Treatment Trials”

  • Page

    New Guidance for Middle-Tier Covid-19 Vaccine Allocation Focuses on Equity and Effectiveness in Reaching High-Risk Populations

    PRESS RELEASE Contact: Susan Gilbert For Immediate Release 1-845-424-4040, ext. 244   communications@thehastingscenter.org   New Guidance for Middle-Tier Covid-19 Vaccine Allocation Focuses on Equity and Effectiveness in Reaching High-Risk Populations Ethical Considerations...

    Read “New Guidance for Middle-Tier Covid-19 Vaccine Allocation Focuses on Equity and Effectiveness in Reaching High-Risk Populations”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Covid is Surging. Most Young Children Are Still Unvaccinated

    Children are returning to classrooms amid another wave of Covid cases, but some public health leaders have leaned into the message that “most of us” can ignore the continued presence of Covid by taking just “a few basic steps,” such as staying up to date with vaccinations. “Most of us,” however, does not include families with young babies, among other groups for whom these steps are unavailable or insufficient.

    Read “Covid is Surging. Most Young Children Are Still Unvaccinated”

  • COVID-19

    Ethical Framework for Health Care Institutions & Guidelines for Institutional Ethics Services Responding to the Coronavirus Pandemic

    Managing Uncertainty, Safeguarding Communities, Guiding Practice Download as PDF Nancy Berlinger, PhD; Matthew Wynia, MD, MPH; Tia Powell, MD; D. Micah Hester, PhD; Aimee Milliken, RN, PhD, HEC-C; Rachel Fabi,...

    Read “Ethical Framework for Health Care Institutions & Guidelines for Institutional Ethics Services Responding to the Coronavirus Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Ethical Responsibility in Publishing Research Results on Covid-19 Treatments

    There is little doubt about the urgent need for Covid-19 treatment. But premature publication of definitive recommendations based on inappropriate conclusions grounded in scant, hastily-acquired data serve only at best to confuse and at worst mislead at a time when tensions are high and need for help is great.

    Read “Ethical Responsibility in Publishing Research Results on Covid-19 Treatments”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    A Covid-19 Side Effect: Virulent Resurgence of Ageism

    Of all the “isms,” ageism is arguably the hardest to address because old age neither a valued stage of life nor an identity that many claim. The coronavirus pandemic may have made that effort even harder.

    Read “A Covid-19 Side Effect: Virulent Resurgence of Ageism”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Covid-19 Vaccine Hesitancy in Rural Communities? Checking Our Assumptions

    As access to vaccines increases, the popular press reports waning demand for vaccines in rural residents and points to vaccine hesitancy. But there may be other reasons why doses distributed to rural areas remain unclaimed.

    Read “Covid-19 Vaccine Hesitancy in Rural Communities? Checking Our Assumptions”

  • Hastings Center News

    New Guidance Released for Covid-19 Vaccine Allocation

    The Hastings Center released new guidance for local public health authorities and health care systems to help ensure equitable and effective prioritization of Covid-19 vaccine access, based on risk factors, in the months ahead.

    Read “New Guidance Released for Covid-19 Vaccine Allocation”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Covid-19 and Deafness: Why the Protocols Fall Short

    I am hard-of-hearing; I wear two hearing aids, and Covid-19 has made all forms of human interaction extraordinarily difficult.

    Read “Covid-19 and Deafness: Why the Protocols Fall Short”

  • Hastings Center News

    Hastings Center President Speaks on Systemic Racism, Health Inequities, and Covid-19

    Read “Hastings Center President Speaks on Systemic Racism, Health Inequities, and Covid-19”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    COVID-19 and the Global Ethics Freefall

    Since the initial outbreak in Wuhan last December, the national and global responses to COVID-19 have been in ethics freefall.

    Read “COVID-19 and the Global Ethics Freefall”

  • Page

    Bioethics and Racism

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: Racism and Health Equity Racism threatens health equity by withholding resources people need for proper health based on morally arbitrary features like...

    Read “Bioethics and Racism”

  • Hastings Center News

    America’s Bioethicists and Health Care Leaders: Government Must Use Federal Powers To Fight COVID-19

    Nearly 1,400 of the nation’s most prominent bioethicists and health leaders signed an urgent letter to Congress and the White House, imploring the U.S. government to immediately use its federal power and funds to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic as a matter of moral imperative. The petition was developed by Mildred Solomon, president of The Hastings Center, and Lawrence Gostin, a Hastings Fellow and director of the O’Neill Center for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University.

    Read “America’s Bioethicists and Health Care Leaders: Government Must Use Federal Powers To Fight COVID-19”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    We Need International Medical Graduates to Help Fight Covid-19. Immigration Policies Keep Them Away

    Read “We Need International Medical Graduates to Help Fight Covid-19. Immigration Policies Keep Them Away”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Islamic Ethics, Covid-19 Vaccination, and the Concept of Harm

    Vaccine hesitancy is a concern around the world, but negative attitudes among Muslims in particular toward some coronavirus vaccines have been the focus of attention in the media. Some scholars in Asia recently issued fatwa against the Chinese Covid-19 vaccine. Media coverage has characterized the Muslim world as a hotspot for vaccine hesitancy, but experts point out biases in this coverage and explain the underlying reasons.

    Read “Islamic Ethics, Covid-19 Vaccination, and the Concept of Harm”

  • Page

    Ethics and the End of Life

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: End of Life Care The central philosophical question in end-of-life care is how to make decisions surrounding the numerous choices about what...

    Read “Ethics and the End of Life”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Ethics of Emergency Use Authorization During the Pandemic

    The Food and Drug Administration's rigorous guidance for an emergency use authorization of a Covid vaccine was met by resistance from the White House, since some of the terms would make it virtually impossible to issue a vaccine-related emergency authorization before Election Day. Understanding the ethical dimensions of issuing it for a vaccine can provide clarity on the necessity of the FDA’s stringent guidelines.

    Read “Ethics of Emergency Use Authorization During the Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Why I Don’t Support Age-Related Rationing During the Covid Pandemic

    Some bioethicists support age-related rationing of ventilators during the Covid-19 pandemic as a way to save the most lives. But that goal might be better realized without strict age cutoffs.

    Read “Why I Don’t Support Age-Related Rationing During the Covid Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Covid Vaccine Patent Waivers are for Health Sovereignty

    The United States, Russia, and China support temporary patent waivers for Covid vaccines. The waivers, which need support from other countries, would likely save lives in low- and middle-income countries.

    Read “Covid Vaccine Patent Waivers are for Health Sovereignty”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    How to Make It Right: Covid Reparations

    Reparations in various forms of compensation to the American victims of preventable Covid, who may experience lifelong health effects, is obligatory.

    Read “How to Make It Right: Covid Reparations”

  • Hastings Center News

    Covid-19 Crisis Triage—Optimizing Health Outcomes and Disability Rights

    Read “Covid-19 Crisis Triage—Optimizing Health Outcomes and Disability Rights”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Prioritizing the “1a”: Ethically Allocating Scarce Covid Vaccines to Health Care Workers

    Beginning this week, guarded vehicles loaded with the first Covid-19 vaccine authorized in the United States are fanning out to hospitals across the country. In vaccine prioritization protocols health care workers, along with nursing home residents, make up phase “1a” – those who are first in line to be vaccinated. While much attention has been paid to who should come next, less is known about how hospitals are allocating vaccine doses among their staff. For many medical centers, the first shipments will only be enough to vaccinate a fraction of their workers. Who goes first within the “1a” category, and how are such decisions made?

    Read “Prioritizing the “1a”: Ethically Allocating Scarce Covid Vaccines to Health Care Workers”

  • COVID-19

    Ethics Resources for Conducting Research in Public Health Emergencies

    Read “Ethics Resources for Conducting Research in Public Health Emergencies”

  • Page

    Ethics and Clinical Trials

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: Clinical Trials Clinical trials are specifically designed to test the safety and efficacy of interventions in humans and are preceded by laboratory...

    Read “Ethics and Clinical Trials”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Should Covid Vaccination Status Be Used to Make Triage Decisions?

    As the Covid-19 pandemic continues to strain health systems’ capacity to provide adequate care for critically ill patients, should patients’ vaccination status be considered in making triage decisions? This question sparked debate recently after the leak of an internal memo of the North Texas Mass Critical Care Guideline Task Force that proposed using patients’ Covid-19 vaccination status as a factor to assign intensive care beds.

    Read “Should Covid Vaccination Status Be Used to Make Triage Decisions?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    With Pediatric Hospitalizations Rising, Reconsider Off-Label Covid Vaccination for Young Children

    Pfizer recently announced that its trials in children 2 to 5 years old produced a weaker than expected antibody response and that it would hold off requesting authorization from the Food and Drug Administration. This news creates opportunities – and additional challenges – for off-label use of Covid-19 vaccines in children,

    Read “With Pediatric Hospitalizations Rising, Reconsider Off-Label Covid Vaccination for Young Children”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Back to School: The Covid Vaccination Choice

    It’s back-to-school season in the United States, the third one during the Covid pandemic, but the first in which all schoolchildren are eligible for Covid vaccines. Yet fewer than a third of children ages 5 to 11 are fully vaccinated, while the percentage of those under 5 who have started–let alone completed–vaccination is in the low single digits. Why? The answers are complicated.

    Read “Back to School: The Covid Vaccination Choice”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    A Student’s Perspective: Universities Must Require Vaccination

    Colleges and universities have an ethical obligation to mandate covid vaccines to protect the health and futures of both their students and the larger communities, in addition to promoting equality through education.

    Read “A Student’s Perspective: Universities Must Require Vaccination”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Overcoming Covid Vaccine Hesitancy Among Minnesota’s Somali Muslims

    When Covid-19 vaccines first became available last year, Somali Muslims in Minnesota--the largest Somali Muslim population in North America-- were fearful and, consequently, their vaccination rate was low and their Covid-19 rate was high. But health professionals and community representatives worked together to understand and overcome their vaccine hesitancy.

    Read “Overcoming Covid Vaccine Hesitancy Among Minnesota’s Somali Muslims”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Post-Covid Bioethics

    Covid-19 is making bioethics more relevant than ever. The ethical dilemmas raised by the pandemic are urgent and heart-wrenching. Who should get a ventilator if we do not have enough? How can we protect the most vulnerable from discrimination in the face of difficult triage decisions? How do we weigh individual liberty against the public interest of keeping people confined? While such questions are not new for bioethicists, the need to answer them urgently, globally, and in very concrete settings, creates unprecedented circumstances. Is this an opportunity for bioethics to learn some important lessons? What should post-Covid bioethics look like?

    Read “Post-Covid Bioethics”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Report from Sub-Saharan Africa: “When the Health Fundamentals Are Weak, Covid Will Expose You.”

    The cries of millions of people in Sub-Saharan Africa and in low- and middle-income countries elsewhere who are struggling to stay alive because of Covid-19 and the lockdowns call for us to revisit the conceptual framework of the human right to health.

    Read “Report from Sub-Saharan Africa: “When the Health Fundamentals Are Weak, Covid Will Expose You.””

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    We Can’t Forget the Nation’s Other Epidemic

    Covid isn’t merely overshadowing the drug overdose crisis—it’s directly worsening it.

    Read “We Can’t Forget the Nation’s Other Epidemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    California U-Turn on Vaccine Mandates for Schoolchildren

    The California legislature appears to have caved to pressure from opponents of a Covid vaccine mandate for schoolkids. I’d prefer to think of it as a wise and strategic retreat from a battle that mandate advocates could not win.

    Read “California U-Turn on Vaccine Mandates for Schoolchildren”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    A Doctor Confronts the Burden of Judgment during the Pandemic

    Is it wrong for doctors to judge their patients’ choices? I have reflected on this question while being on the frontline of the Covid-19 pandemic in New York City. Health...

    Read “A Doctor Confronts the Burden of Judgment during the Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Accepting the Challenge: Covid Vaccine Challenge Trials Can Be Ethically Justified

    The Covid-19 pandemic is unlikely to end until there is a safe, effective, and widely distributed vaccine. How soon can researchers achieve this goal? The answer largely depends on which strategies researchers are willing to adopt. One potential strategy is to conduct human challenge studies, in which researchers give an experimental vaccine to healthy volunteers and then test—or “challenge”—the vaccine by purposely exposing volunteers to the virus. Although a growing number of voices are calling on researchers to employ this strategy, the proposal is generating a heated debate about the ethics of such research.

    Read “Accepting the Challenge: Covid Vaccine Challenge Trials Can Be Ethically Justified”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Should Clinicians Ask Hospitalized Covid Patients Why They Aren’t Vaccinated?

    The role of doctors, nurses and other clinicians is to treat patients without passing judgment and to fulfill their fiduciary duty. However, the Covid-19 pandemic has muddled these obligations.

    Read “Should Clinicians Ask Hospitalized Covid Patients Why They Aren’t Vaccinated?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Prioritize Health Care Workers for Ventilators? Not So Fast

    In places where Covid-19 is increasing – and in preparation for a possible second wave of the pandemic-- hospitals are preparing to triage critical resources if necessary. Some are prioritizing health care workers for ventilators. We think this is a mistake.

    Read “Prioritize Health Care Workers for Ventilators? Not So Fast”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Fair Compensation for Rare Vaccine Harms

    As multiple Covid vaccine candidates enter clinical trials and hopefully move closer to approval, one important unanswered question is how to compensate the rare cases of serious vaccine harm.

    Read “Fair Compensation for Rare Vaccine Harms”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Vaccine Hesitancy Is No Excuse for Systemic Racism

    Fewer vaccines are going to Black people. While it’s easy to fall back on vaccine hesitancy as an excuse, systemic racism is to blame.

    Read “Vaccine Hesitancy Is No Excuse for Systemic Racism”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Crowdfunding for Covid-Related Needs: Unfair and Inadequate

    One-third of all new GoFundMe campaigns in the United States are for COVID-19-related needs. This shows where we have failed as a society. It is a makeshift response to institutional failures and not a fair or sustainable solution to crises.

    Read “Crowdfunding for Covid-Related Needs: Unfair and Inadequate”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    “If the virus doesn’t kill us, the stress and anxiety will.” Immigrants during Covid

    Growing isolation, financial challenges and disease burden during the Covid-19 pandemic threaten to worsen the mental health needs of the entire U.S. population. These challenges are heightened among immigrants with untreated chronic mental health conditions as they experience added psychological distress owing to harsh immigration policies and worsening structural barriers to health during the pandemic.

    Read ““If the virus doesn’t kill us, the stress and anxiety will.” Immigrants during Covid”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Covid Doesn’t Justify Cutting Corners on Medical Interpretation

    Many hospitals are providing incomplete or subpar professional medical interpretation to the patients who need it--many of whom are disproportionately affected by Covid.

    Read “Covid Doesn’t Justify Cutting Corners on Medical Interpretation”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Bringing Ethics into the Global Coronavirus Response

    Covid-19 is a matter of public and global health ethics, and the pandemic is currently accelerating cooperation within and contributions from these fields. A meeting on June 27, hosted by the European Union and Global Citizen, is the latest example another global pledging event on June 27, will include governments and large institutions, as well as individuals and communities worldwide.

    Read “Bringing Ethics into the Global Coronavirus Response”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Vaccine Mandates for Kids: It’s Not Whether, But When

    States and school boards around the country are engaged in a debate about whether to require middle and high school students to be fully vaccinated against Covid-19. The debate is not so much about whether to mandate. It's when to do so.

    Read “Vaccine Mandates for Kids: It’s Not Whether, But When”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Treating Gun Violence as a Public Health Threat: Not Exactly What We Meant

    This week, the United States saw two momentous public health events: one million deaths attributed to Covid and the 198th mass shooting of the year. Both the pandemic and gun shootings are threats to public health that are not being adequately addressed.

    Read “Treating Gun Violence as a Public Health Threat: Not Exactly What We Meant”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Vaccinated and Still Isolated: The Ethics of Overprotecting Nursing Home Residents

    The pandemic is not over, but light is beginning to crest the horizon. Vaccination rates, especially among older adults and their caregivers, are rising. As we begin to relax physical...

    Read “Vaccinated and Still Isolated: The Ethics of Overprotecting Nursing Home Residents”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Parents, Covid, and Trauma-Informed Choices

    As the parent of a child under 5 years old, I am worried about what lies ahead for kids and Covid-19. The more contagious Delta variant is widely circulating, infecting...

    Read “Parents, Covid, and Trauma-Informed Choices”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    The Covid Threat No One Is Talking About: Wearing Scrubs in Public

    The Covid-19 outbreak has forced health care providers, administrative officials, and the general public to each play their part in doing no harm to others. It may come as a surprise to many people, but health care workers may unknowingly spread Covid-19 in their communities simply by wearing scrubs in public.

    Read “The Covid Threat No One Is Talking About: Wearing Scrubs in Public”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Studying Covid Vaccines in the Youngest Kids

    Children have suffered both physical and mental illness during the pandemic. Nearly 200 children in the United States have died. Acute mental health crises increased during the pandemic. Getting children immunized is the best way to get back to normal. We suggest an option that would permit children under 5 to be vaccinated without waiting until traditional prospective randomized trials can be completed.

    Read “Studying Covid Vaccines in the Youngest Kids”

  • Hastings Center News

    Health Care Professionals’ Burnout During Covid

    Frontline physicians who cared for Covid-19 patients during the first wave of the pandemic in New York City and New Orleans reported multiple factors that contributed to their occupational stress...

    Read “Health Care Professionals’ Burnout During Covid”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Moving On from Covid? Immunocompromised People Can’t

    The best case scenario for immunocompromised people like me would be universal masking in all public spaces. But I am willing to compromise.

    Read “Moving On from Covid? Immunocompromised People Can’t”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Confronting Disability Discrimination During the Pandemic

    As hospitals and public health authorities devise triage protocols to allocate scarce critical-care resources during the Covid-19 pandemic, people with disabilities are expressing alarm that these protocols devalue them and exacerbate long-entrenched ableism in health care. Lawsuits alleging disability discrimination in have been filed in Washington and Alabama. The U.S. Office for Civil Rights is investigating disability discrimination complaints in triage protocols. The challenge is to develop protocols that will minimize discrimination in the health care system.

    Read “Confronting Disability Discrimination During the Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Hacking Ventilators in a Pandemic

    The Covid-19 pandemic continues to test and occasionally overwhelm health care institutions. Many practitioners may face the ethically challenging scenario of having to ration ventilators while triaging patients in “crisis care.” Ventilator shortages have led to innovative ventilator design “hacks.” Are these improvised ventilators ethical?

    Read “Hacking Ventilators in a Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Global Health Justice: Now Is the Time

    The recognition of the social injustices surrounding the pandemic is an important opportunity to understand the longstanding links between health and social and global justice.

    Read “Global Health Justice: Now Is the Time”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Masks Are Not Created Equal

    Finally, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is working on developing standards for masks to see which ones actually block viruses. In the meantime, though, we should all be acting on what we do know about the effectiveness of various masks against Covid.

    Read “Masks Are Not Created Equal”

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    Ethics and Aging

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: AgingThere is a steady rise in world population growth with the fastest proportional increase coming from the elderly. Technological advances in medicine...

    Read “Ethics and Aging”

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    Advancing Housing & Health Equity for Older Adults

    The Covid-19 RECAPP Report: Advancing Housing & Health Equity for Older Adults: Pandemic Innovations and Policy Ideas Report Summary and Recommendations This grant-funded collaborative research led by Nancy Berlinger of The...

    Read “Advancing Housing & Health Equity for Older Adults”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    False Hope About Coronavirus Treatments

    While patients can and do recover from coronavirus infections, there are currently no approved treatments that are known to work against COVID-19.

    Read “False Hope About Coronavirus Treatments”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Volunteering for a Covid Vaccine Trial: Fulfilling Hindu Obligations or Fostering Pharmaceutical Company Profits?

    Volunteering for a Covid-19 vaccine trial satisfied my altruistic goals and harmonizes with my Hindu beliefs. But I am troubled that a drug company is going to profit from my altruism and my religious obligations.

    Read “Volunteering for a Covid Vaccine Trial: Fulfilling Hindu Obligations or Fostering Pharmaceutical Company Profits?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    “You Can See Your Loved One Now.” Can Visitor Restrictions During Covid Unduly Influence End-of-Life Decisions?

    One of the factors considered most important by dying patients and their families is the opportunity to be together. For many of our hospitalized patients in palliative care, the presence of loved ones at the bedside is such a given that we don’t even address it explicitly in advance care planning discussions. So, it comes as no surprise that Covid- 19-related visitor restrictions affecting hospitalized patients might impact end-of-life decision-making, potentially in ways that are ethically problematic.

    Read ““You Can See Your Loved One Now.” Can Visitor Restrictions During Covid Unduly Influence End-of-Life Decisions?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Should Covid Vaccination Schedules Deviate from the Status Quo–as a Last Resort?

    Last month, with concerns over the supply and coordinated administration of coronavirus vaccines escalating, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention conceded that “any available mRNA COVID-19 vaccine” may be used to complete vaccination in “exceptional situations” preventing multi-dose manufacturer matching. While presented solely as a last resort, this guidance reflects a dilemma currently sweeping across the medical and health policy worlds: given limited supply, should vaccination efforts—still only authorized for emergency use in this country—deviate from evidence-driven, studied regimens to maximize individuals reached?

    Read “Should Covid Vaccination Schedules Deviate from the Status Quo–as a Last Resort?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Too Taboo to Contemplate? Refusing Covid Vaccination for Some People with Dementia

    There are a whole lot of us who think that, if we had dementia and were unable to live independently, we would prefer death. The idea that someone suffering from dementia and confined to a nursing home might actually welcome death is apparently so taboo that it cannot be openly contemplated.

    Read “Too Taboo to Contemplate? Refusing Covid Vaccination for Some People with Dementia”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    What Warrants Religious Exemption from Covid Vaccine Mandates?

    Faced with mandatory Covid vaccination, students and employees have appealed to religion as grounds for exemption. This latest conscience war within our culture wars presents a minefield of legal and philosophical complexities for states and health care systems.

    Read “What Warrants Religious Exemption from Covid Vaccine Mandates?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Instead of Vaccine Passports, Let’s Push for Global Justice in Vaccine Access

    In Costa Rica, where I live, only 24% of the population has received at least one vaccine dose because we have received very small amounts of vaccines. The Costa Rican president suggested that every person who can travel to the U.S. to get the jab, should do it. Vaccine tourism, then, seems to be another promising business opportunity for the powerful countries that have accumulated vaccines instead of redistributing them soon and fairly.

    Read “Instead of Vaccine Passports, Let’s Push for Global Justice in Vaccine Access”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Are Physicians Hypocrites for Supporting Black Lives Matter Protests and Opposing Anti-Lockdown Protests? An Ethical Analysis

    Physicians have been vocal in condemning the anti-lockdown protests while endorsing and even participating in the Black Lives Matter protests. This has led to criticism of the medical community for being inconsistent and hypocritical. What does an ethical analysis reveal?

    Read “Are Physicians Hypocrites for Supporting Black Lives Matter Protests and Opposing Anti-Lockdown Protests? An Ethical Analysis”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Against Personal Ventilator Reallocation

    Personal ventilators used by people with disabilities should not reallocated to people with Covid-19. Triage protocols should be immediately clarified and explicitly state that personal ventilators will be protected in all cases.

    Read “Against Personal Ventilator Reallocation”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Balancing a Patient’s Autonomy Against Misinformation

    With ventilator support, Ms. J would have a 50% chance of making a full recovery. Without it she would almost certainly die. That notwithstanding, Ms. J declined to consent to the ventilator.

    Read “Balancing a Patient’s Autonomy Against Misinformation”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Working Around the System: Vaccine Navigators and Vaccine Equity

    Vaccine navigators have emerged as a response to the complexity of mass vaccination for Covid-19.

    Read “Working Around the System: Vaccine Navigators and Vaccine Equity”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    After the Surge: Prioritizing the Backlog of Delayed Hospital Procedures

    The rewards of social distancing are beginning to accrue in former hotspots such as Seattle, the New York metropolitan area, and the San Francisco Bay Area, where the number of new Covid-19 cases requiring hospitalization is declining. Assuming the rewards hold in the face of pressures to reopen the economy, hospitals will now face challenges of reopening their own nonpandemic services for patients whose elective surgeries and other procedures were postponed. Which patients should get priority?

    Read “After the Surge: Prioritizing the Backlog of Delayed Hospital Procedures”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Science in the Biden White House: Eric Lander, Alondra Nelson, and the Legacy of Lewis Thomas

    Science has replaced populism in the White House. For the first time, the president's science advisor will be elevated to cabinet rank. There are other good omens, as well.

    Read “Science in the Biden White House: Eric Lander, Alondra Nelson, and the Legacy of Lewis Thomas”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Exhortations to Trust Biomedical Experts: What’s Missing?

    Disagreements among biomedical experts regarding whether the scientific evidence supports delaying the second shot of Covid-19 vaccines or pausing the AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson vaccines because of very rare side effects bring to the fore missing aspects in exhortations to trust biomedical experts.

    Read “Exhortations to Trust Biomedical Experts: What’s Missing?”

  • Hastings Center News

    Advancing Vaccine Equity: Lessons Learned from the Federal Health Center Covid-19 Vaccine Program

    How did federally funded nonprofit primary care centers for medically underserved patients promote equitable access to Covid vaccination? A new publication examines this question and reveals valuable lessons for supporting just vaccine allocation and improving health equity in the United States.

    Read “Advancing Vaccine Equity: Lessons Learned from the Federal Health Center Covid-19 Vaccine Program”

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    Ethics and the Family Caregiving

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: Family Caregiving The central philosophical question in family caregiving is how to best support infrastructures of care in times where changes in...

    Read “Ethics and the Family Caregiving”

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    Advancing Social Justice, Health Equity, and Community

    TRANSCRIPT: February 9, 2021 Hello, good afternoon. If you’re on the East Coast and welcome to the annual Daniel Callahan lecture, advancing social justice, health, equity and Community. We are...

    Read “Advancing Social Justice, Health Equity, and Community”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    On Being a Foster Parent During Covid

    I knew that being a foster parent would be demanding, but I was unprepared for the extent of the challenges, which were exacerbated by the pandemic.

    Read “On Being a Foster Parent During Covid”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Vaccination Discrimination Goes Against Nursing Ethics

    Some health care providers are prioritizing patients who are fully vaccinated against Covid-19 over those who are unvaccinated. This is unethical.

    Read “Vaccination Discrimination Goes Against Nursing Ethics”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Another Pragmatic Public Health Decision

    There has been much criticism of the decision by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to let Covid-infected people who are feeling better to stop quarantining after five days and simply wear a mask. But this sort of pragmatic decision has a long history in public health.

    Read “Another Pragmatic Public Health Decision”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    When to Reopen the Nation is an Ethics Question—Not Only a Scientific One

    As the world reels from the Covid-19 pandemic, two things have become very clear: the health impacts of the disease are devastating, but the aggressive social distancing policies currently being used to flatten the curve also have serious costs. As a result, the question of when and how to reopen the nation is on everyone’s mind. Do we open quickly in an effort to kick-start the economy? Or do we remain under lockdown as long as possible to stop the spread of the virus?

    Read “When to Reopen the Nation is an Ethics Question—Not Only a Scientific One”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Surrogate Decision-Making for Incarcerated Patients: A Pandemic-Inspired Call to Action

    As Covid-19 continues to plague the United States, insufficient attention has been paid to the role that incarcerated persons play in the persistence of this pandemic and the work that...

    Read “Surrogate Decision-Making for Incarcerated Patients: A Pandemic-Inspired Call to Action”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    The Bioethics of Built Health Care Spaces

    Around the world, an alarming percentage of Covid-19 deaths occurred in long-term care facilities. Some of these deaths may have been avoided by changes in design. It's time that bioethicists to take a closer look at the built health care environment.

    Read “The Bioethics of Built Health Care Spaces”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    #WeAreEssential: Why Disabled People Should Be Appointed to Hospital Triage Committees

    There's a long history of conflict between the institution of medicine, bioethics, and the disability community. With Covid-19 disproportionately affecting people with disabilities, we must do everything we can to avoid a triage decision-making process that pushes disabled people to the side. One important action is to appoint people with disabilities, and especially those of color, to hospital triage committees. To our knowledge, no hospital or state crisis standards of care protocol mandates this kind of representation.

    Read “#WeAreEssential: Why Disabled People Should Be Appointed to Hospital Triage Committees”

  • Hastings Center News

    Crisis Standards of Care: New in the Hastings Center Report

    As Covid spreads and leaves intensive care units at or near capacity in several states, some regions have approved crisis standards of care, which involve health care rationing. The latest...

    Read “Crisis Standards of Care: New in the Hastings Center Report”

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    TRANSCRIPT: Communicating Ethical Challenges in Crises

    Novmber 15, 2022 Transcription by machine — may contain errors Elizabeth Lanphier So thank you all for being here today. It’s my pleasure to welcome you to this inaugural session...

    Read “TRANSCRIPT: Communicating Ethical Challenges in Crises”

  • From Bioethics Briefings

    Ethical Drug Pricing

    Framing the Issue     Many prescription drugs are prohibitively expensive. In the United States, brand-name prescription drug prices are higher than in other wealthy countries. New variants of drugs for...

    Read “Ethical Drug Pricing”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Detention, Dignity, and a Call for Bioethics Advocacy

    Read “Detention, Dignity, and a Call for Bioethics Advocacy”

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    Science and Technology Ethics

    Technology ethics: Technology ethics comprises values and ethical considerations that should guide regulation and oversight, protect privacy and confidentiality, and require responsible actions in the creation and use of technology....

    Read “Science and Technology Ethics”

  • Page

    New in the Hastings Center Report: Crisis Standards of Care, September-October 2021 issue

    Press release HCR September-October 2021 LH New in the Hastings Center Report: Crisis Standards of Care, September-October 2021 issue As Covid spreads and leaves intensive care units at or near capacity...

    Read “New in the Hastings Center Report: Crisis Standards of Care, September-October 2021 issue”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Masks, Values, and a Lesson for Democracy?

    As mask mandates are rolled back and friends and neighbors debate the risks and benefits of masks and the merits or permissibility of mandating their use, we can catch a glimpse of the considerable extent to which values depend heavily on something other than pure reason. It’s a bit disappointing, perhaps. But it might be a useful lesson for democracy.

    Read “Masks, Values, and a Lesson for Democracy?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    A Warning from China: After the Zero Covid Policy

    A massive wave of Covid infections has begun now that China has ended much of its zero Covid policy. Three steps ought to be taken.

    Read “A Warning from China: After the Zero Covid Policy”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Individual Freedom or Public Health? A False Choice in the Covid Era

    When scientists first suggested population-wide social distancing as the only feasible way to suppress Covid-19, they were the first to admit it may not work in a free society. We are now months into placing mass restrictions on human behavior to suppress a virus that lacks an effective vaccine or treatment. Now is the time to ask: is this the authoritarian nightmare many feared, or will freedom and democracy survive Covid-19?

    Read “Individual Freedom or Public Health? A False Choice in the Covid Era”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Coronavirus Response Is Insufficient for Vulnerable New Yorkers

    Read “Coronavirus Response Is Insufficient for Vulnerable New Yorkers”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Love Thy Neighbor as Thyself: Building Community During Covid

    The opposition to mask and vaccine mandates transcends the issue of individual liberty.

    Read “Love Thy Neighbor as Thyself: Building Community During Covid”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Beyond the Covid Crisis—A New Social Contract with Public Health

    Covid-19 is teaching us the stern lesson that economic well-being and health justice are two sides of the same coin. To weather pandemics and restore the social contact that economic life demands, we need to sign a new social contract with public health.

    Read “Beyond the Covid Crisis—A New Social Contract with Public Health”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Global Allocation of Coronavirus Vaccines

    A Covid-19 vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech has received emergency authorization in the United States and has been authorized in the countries, and a vaccine by Moderna is likely to be authorized soon. In spite of this good news, at least for the first couple of years, Covid-19 vaccines will be a scarce resource. Because low-income countries are likely to lose out in the scramble to get access to them, there have been calls for global solidarity. While equitable allocation of vaccines around the world would be ideal, it is unrealistic as a near-term goal.

    Read “Global Allocation of Coronavirus Vaccines”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Human Plasma and Bioethics Nationalism

    The procurement of human plasma as a potential therapy for Covid-19 is one of the latest examples of bioethics nationalism, defined by Jonathan Moreno in this blog as “distinct bioethics standards [which] are formally proclaimed as a matter of right by a sovereign state.” The race for a Covid cure pushes at the weak seams in the international liberal order in much the same way that Covid appears to be pushing at health care systems.

    Read “Human Plasma and Bioethics Nationalism”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Ethical Medicine Means Getting Political

    Dilemmas that clinicians face in the coronavirus pandemic–who gets the ventilator, the 80-year-old grandmother or the 20-year-old student?–are the bread and butter of mainstream bioethics. In medical school, my classmates and I memorized the four principles (beneficence, nonmaleficence, justice, and autonomy), which we were told would help us make hard clinical decisions in ethically ambiguous terrain. But Covid-19 shows that medical ethics means much more than what generally falls under bioethics. Medical ethics is deeply political, and to act ethically in medicine means engaging the larger context in which it operates.

    Read “Ethical Medicine Means Getting Political”

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    The Hastings Center Bioethics Timeline

    “Bioethics” has been defined in several different ways. Most broadly, it is the interdisciplinary study of ethical, legal, and social issues arising in the life sciences and health care. Though...

    Read “The Hastings Center Bioethics Timeline”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    COVID: Collective of Voices in Distress

    Read “COVID: Collective of Voices in Distress”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    After the Anniversary of Covid, Reckoning with Many New Normals

    Anniversaries are complicated. In rehabilitation psychology, the anniversary of an accident that caused a brain or spinal cord injury can be a time for profound gratitude and for grief. Now that we have passed the one-year anniversary of the Covid pandemic, each of us continues to deal with the repercussions and wondering what the "new normal" may look like.

    Read “After the Anniversary of Covid, Reckoning with Many New Normals”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Before We Turn to Digital Contact Tracing for Covid, Remember Surveillance in the Sixties

    Is it unrealistic to believe that phone apps for digital Covid contact tracing can be designed and regulated in ways that prevent the information they collect from being misused? It's worth remembering surveillance of Vietnam War protesters and Martin Luther King Jr.

    Read “Before We Turn to Digital Contact Tracing for Covid, Remember Surveillance in the Sixties”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    WHO-China Report on Covid: Important Step Forward, More to Be Done

    The World Health Organization recently released a long-anticipated report on SARS-CoV-2 origins, based on 28 days of field research and site visits in China conducted jointly by 17 international and...

    Read “WHO-China Report on Covid: Important Step Forward, More to Be Done”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    The CDC’s Misguided Medical Masking Policy

    The Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s revised guidelines have done away with universal masking at health care facilities, making masking optional if community Covid transmission isn’t high. It’s the latest attempt of public health officials to adapt their guidance to meet the country’s fatigued sensibilities. Some patients will be at risk.

    Read “The CDC’s Misguided Medical Masking Policy”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Teaching Medical Ethics During the Pandemic

    Despite the disruptive changes to my undergraduate medical ethics class this semester, my students have learned a lot about the paradox that the coronavirus presents: it is an unprecedented event, beyond the experience of nearly everyone alive today, and yet it puts on grim display the well-known problems of inequality that chronically plague the United States. Since week six of the semester, I have readjusted each unit on the syllabus to address some of the ethical issues that Covid-19 has brought to the fore, familiar challenges that have been stressed and distorted in astonishing ways by the pandemic.

    Read “Teaching Medical Ethics During the Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Sustaining Clinical Empathy During the Pandemic

    As Covid-19 continues to spread throughout the United States, doctors, nurses, and oth-er clinicians are facing unmistakable tragedies. But something less perceptible is afoot. Empathy in medicine is under siege.

    Read “Sustaining Clinical Empathy During the Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    When It Comes to Rationing, Disability Rights Law Prohibits More than Prejudice

    This week, the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Civil Rights resolved one of many civil rights complaints alleging discrimination on the basis of disability–the first instance of federal intervention to enforce civil rights laws in rationing protocols since the beginning of the Covid-19 crisis. But more work is needed to protect patients with disabilities in the allocation of scarce medical resources.

    Read “When It Comes to Rationing, Disability Rights Law Prohibits More than Prejudice”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    On Being an Elder in a Pandemic

    Do the elderly have special obligations during a pandemic, that is, something more than the duty we all have for hand washing, social distancing, and so on? I believe the answer is, yes, and foremost among these is an obligation for parsimonious use of newly scarce and expensive health care resources.

    Read “On Being an Elder in a Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Capitalist Philanthropy and Vaccine Imperialism

    The commitments made by the wealthiest countries to share Covid vaccines and funding for international cooperation mechanisms are crucial, but insufficient. They reflect the “securitization of health,” a 21st century phenomenon whereby states turn health issues into national security issues.

    Read “Capitalist Philanthropy and Vaccine Imperialism”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Omicron, the Legacy of Renée Fox, and the Uncertain Practice of Medicine

    Like the pandemic, uncertainty, growing confidence, and the return of doubt come in waves. The Omicron variant is just the latest twist in this plot.

    Read “Omicron, the Legacy of Renée Fox, and the Uncertain Practice of Medicine”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Vaccine Mandates for Health Care Workers Raise Several Ethical Dilemmas

    The moral justification for mandating covid vaccination for health care workers is clear. But what happens if some health care workers still refuse to be vaccinated, and there aren't enough vaccinated staff to care for all the patients in a hospital?

    Read “Vaccine Mandates for Health Care Workers Raise Several Ethical Dilemmas”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Ashamed to Be Vaccinated? The Ethics of Health Care Employees Forgoing Unfair Priority

    Suppose you are young, healthy, employed in a health care system and that your line of work does not require leaving the low-risk comfort of your home. Now suppose that your employer offers you a vaccine. You know there are others in your community who are at greater risk of contracting and dying from Covid-19 than you. Should you accept the dose?

    Read “Ashamed to Be Vaccinated? The Ethics of Health Care Employees Forgoing Unfair Priority”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Keep Politics Out of State Medical Policy

    State medical boards and other government-appointed health officials have an obligation to follow evidence-based medicine to frame their opinions and regulations. However, there is disturbing evidence that, in some cases, political ideology is guiding health policy.

    Read “Keep Politics Out of State Medical Policy”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Pandemic Language

    Read “Pandemic Language”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Religion During the Coronavirus Pandemic: Islamic Bioethical Perspectives

    Congregational rituals of religious communities around the world have attracted attention for their possible threat of spreading the coronavirus. Negative Media coverage has generally depicted members of religious communities as more or less “reckless” groups whose “fanatic” convictions can make them harm others from inside or outside their religious traditions. However, what hasn’t been discussed is how this issue should be approached as a complex bioethical issue that concerns people worldwide. With the beginning of Ramadan, paying attention to the nuances and complexities of this issue becomes especially pressing.

    Read “Religion During the Coronavirus Pandemic: Islamic Bioethical Perspectives”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Coronavirus and the Crisis of Trust

    Influenza and coronavirus cause similar symptoms probably through similar modes of transmission. What is unique about coronavirus is that misinformation, missteps, conspiracies, and cover-ups have left their mark on public trust.

    Read “Coronavirus and the Crisis of Trust”

  • Hastings Center News

    Hastings Center Welcomes 24 New Fellows

    The Hastings Center is pleased  to announce the election of 24 new fellows. Hastings Center fellows are a group of more than 200 individuals of outstanding accomplishment whose work has...

    Read “Hastings Center Welcomes 24 New Fellows”

  • Page

    How Should the Public Learn?

    Principal Investigators: Bruce Jennings, Gregory Kaebnick, Mildred Solomon Co-Investigators: Michael Gusmano, Carolyn P. Neuhaus Funder: John S. and James L. Knight Foundation Democracy requires the capacity to receive information through...

    Read “How Should the Public Learn?”

  • Hastings Center News

    Hastings Center Welcomes 13 New Fellows

    The Hastings Center is pleased to announce the election of the 2023 fellows. Hastings Center fellows are a group of more than 200 individuals of outstanding accomplishment whose work has...

    Read “Hastings Center Welcomes 13 New Fellows”

  • Hastings Center News

    Hastings Center Welcomes 2024 Fellows

    The Hastings Center is pleased to announce the election of the 2024 fellows. Hastings Center fellows are a group of about 300 individuals of outstanding accomplishment whose work has informed...

    Read “Hastings Center Welcomes 2024 Fellows”

  • Page

    Bioethics for Aging Societies

    For decades, bioethics scholarship, empirical research, and recommendations concerning older adults has focused on decisions and care in patients nearing the end of life. Until recently, bioethics work on aging...

    Read “Bioethics for Aging Societies”

  • Page

    Ethics and Abortion

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: AbortionA central philosophical question in the abortion debate concerns the moral status of the embryo and fetus. Public opinion on abortion falls...

    Read “Ethics and Abortion”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Flattening the Curve, Then What?

    Read “Flattening the Curve, Then What?”

  • Page

    Vaccine Mandates and Passports: Are They Legal and Ethical?

    HASTINGS CONVERSATIONS: A SERIES Although roughly 60% of adults in the United States have had at least one Covid vaccine shot, many Americans remain reluctant, or outright opposed, to getting...

    Read “Vaccine Mandates and Passports: Are They Legal and Ethical?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Measure Twice and Cut Once: The Value of Health Care Ethicists in the Pandemic

    The major success story of health care ethicists in the pandemic has been their role in establishing ventilator triage policies. But they have more to offer the C-suite of health care institutions.

    Read “Measure Twice and Cut Once: The Value of Health Care Ethicists in the Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Chinese Bioethicists: Silencing Doctor Impeded Early Control of Coronavirus

    The death of Dr Li Wenliang from COVID-19 is heartbreaking for our country and people. Dr. Li was reprimanded for messages he posted in a chat group warning fellow doctors about a mysterious infection. His death from coronavirus underscored gaps and deficiencies in our country’s health care system and system of governance.

    Read “Chinese Bioethicists: Silencing Doctor Impeded Early Control of Coronavirus”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    U.S. and Canada: Being Good Neighbors in the Pandemic

    Canada has a fraction of the number of cases of Covid-19 as the U.S. Canadians feel vulnerable. But Canadians and Americans need to find ways to build and maintain trust within and across our borders.

    Read “U.S. and Canada: Being Good Neighbors in the Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Warp Speed Bioethics

    It takes less time than ever to publish papers. But is quality sacrificed by doing bioethics at warp speed, especially during the Covid pandemic?

    Read “Warp Speed Bioethics”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Ethics Supports Seeking Population Immunity, Not Immunizing Priority Groups

    Vaccine allocation guidelines that prioritize people at greatest risk of Covid-19 require considerable administrative work (sometimes taking weeks). This is creating a bottleneck that has resulted in doses stuck in freezers not in arms. There's a better, more ethical way to allocate vaccines.

    Read “Ethics Supports Seeking Population Immunity, Not Immunizing Priority Groups”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    I Was Never “Just” a Visitor

    Caregivers are not visitors. Hospital policies that restrict visits from family caregivers can harm patients.

    Read “I Was Never “Just” a Visitor”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    We Have Met the Enemy and It Is Us

    In its early days, bioethics emphasized patient autonomy in the doctor-patient relationship. But patient autonomy is not the be-all and end-all principle to follow in all health care settings. Especially in lethal, airborne infectious disease pandemics.

    Read “We Have Met the Enemy and It Is Us”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    The FDA and the Moral Distinction Between Killing and Letting Die

    Why is the FDA dragging its feet in approving Covid vaccines for children under 12? Justifications lack moral weight.

    Read “The FDA and the Moral Distinction Between Killing and Letting Die”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Social-Change Games Can Help Us Understand the Public Health Choices We Face

    Before there was the Covid-19 pandemic, there was Pandemic. This tabletop game, in which players collaborate to fight disease outbreaks, debuted in 2007. Expansions feature weaponized pathogens, historic pandemics, zoonotic diseases, and vaccine development races. Game mechanics modelled on pandemic vectors provide multiple narratives: battle, quest, detection, discovery. There is satisfaction in playing “against” disease–and winning. Real pandemic is not as tidy as a game. But can games support understanding about the societal challenges we now face? Yes.

    Read “Social-Change Games Can Help Us Understand the Public Health Choices We Face”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Surprising Surge of Egg Freezing during the Pandemic Raises Ethical Questions

    Contrary to the expectations of many fertility clinics, demand for egg freezing has increased sharply during the Covid-19 pandemic, highlighting longstanding ethical concerns about egg freezing clinics.

    Read “Surprising Surge of Egg Freezing during the Pandemic Raises Ethical Questions”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Using the Pandemic as an Excuse to Limit Abortion

    Several states, including Ohio, Alabama, Arkansas, Texas, Iowa, and Oklahoma, declared abortion a nonessential service at some point during the pandemic, meaning that it was effectively banned until the crisis passed. Supporters of the policies maintain that abortion is an elective procedure whose medical resources are better off used in the fight against the pandemic. But abortion opponents have been taking advantage of the current circumstances to limit abortion access.

    Read “Using the Pandemic as an Excuse to Limit Abortion”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Ethicists as a Force for Institutional Change and Policies to Promote Equality

    In his recent JAMA article, Donald Berwick eloquently describes what he termed the “moral determinants of health,” by which he meant a strong sense of social solidarity in which people in the United States would “depend on each other for securing the basic circumstances of healthy lives,” reflecting a “moral law within.” Berwick’s work should serve as a call to action for bioethicists and clinical ethicists to consider what they can do to be forces of broad moral change in their institutions.

    Read “Ethicists as a Force for Institutional Change and Policies to Promote Equality”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Bioethics, Nazi Analogies, and the Coronavirus Pandemic

    The year 2020 will be remembered as the first year of the coronavirus pandemic. But the pandemic was not alone in creating fear and dismay and raising ethical questions. Think of the rise in antisemitism, police violence against Black people, protests against immigration, and rallies by groups espousing Nazi slogans and symbols. Hate crimes, including murder, are the highest in years, according to the most recent FBI report, and were particularly aimed at Jews and Hispanics. Asian-Americans have been targeted as carriers of the so-called “China virus.”

    Read “Bioethics, Nazi Analogies, and the Coronavirus Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Living through the Pandemic in New Zealand

    In New Zealand we have been saved from the worst devastations of Covid-19 by a firm government, courage and care for one another, and our geographic “moat.” With the recent minor surge of cases, our government has, once again, encouraged us to respond as a team of 5 million. We have been guided by the slogan “Be kind.”

    Read “Living through the Pandemic in New Zealand”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Resilience and the Twin Medical Catastrophes of War and Pandemic

    As I sit here in my office at the Slovak Medical University in Bratislava, my colleagues are experiencing great moral anguish because of Russia’s invasion of neighboring Ukraine. Simultaneously, we are also confronting the Omicron wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. The war complicates and burdens health care here and in other border nations exponentially, and especially so in combination with the pandemic.

    Read “Resilience and the Twin Medical Catastrophes of War and Pandemic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Financing Reforms to Meet a Pivotal Moment in Global Health

    This year will be the most important moment for global health since WHO’s founding in 1948, but only if states give major reforms their full political and financial backing.

    Read “Financing Reforms to Meet a Pivotal Moment in Global Health”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    New Regulation for Organ Procurement Will Improve Equity and Save Lives

    In the more than 35 years since federal legislation created organ procurement organizations (OPOs) to recover organs from deceased donors for transplantation, there has been a disparity in their performance,...

    Read “New Regulation for Organ Procurement Will Improve Equity and Save Lives”

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    Solomon to Step Down as Hastings Center President

    (JULY 18, 2022) – Hastings Center President Mildred Z. Solomon announced today that she plans to step down in June 2023, marking 11 years of leadership at the pioneering ethics...

    Read “Solomon to Step Down as Hastings Center President”

  • SPECIAL EVENT

    Re-Opening the Nation: What Values Should Guide Us?

    Read “Re-Opening the Nation: What Values Should Guide Us?”

  • Page

    Ethics of Nature, Human Nature, and Biotechnology

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: Nature, Human Nature, and Biotechnology Moral views about nature—claims that nature or a natural state of affairs has value—are important in contemporary...

    Read “Ethics of Nature, Human Nature, and Biotechnology”

  • Hastings Center News

    The Hastings Center Announces Three Promotions

    The Hastings Center is pleased to announce three staff promotions in the Advancement, Research, and Editorial Departments. The promotions are part of a reorganization meant to optimize the alignment of...

    Read “The Hastings Center Announces Three Promotions”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Moving the Needle on Pathogen Sharing and Global Health Equity

    Faster access and fairer benefits for all. It sounds simple. But is it?

    Read “Moving the Needle on Pathogen Sharing and Global Health Equity”

  • From Bioethics Briefings

    Racism and Health Equity

    Framing the Issue Racism has been declared a threat to public health by public health and medical organizations like the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the American Medical...

    Read “Racism and Health Equity”

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    Hastings Conversations: Our Series

    In 2020, The Hastings Center produced two Hastings Conversations series, Reopening the Nation, in response to the Covid-19 epidemic, and Securing Health in a Troubled Time, in response to racial...

    Read “Hastings Conversations: Our Series”

  • Hastings Center News

    Health Equity Summit Recap

    The Hastings Center and the Association of American Medical Colleges Center for Health Justice convened a two-day health equity summit called “Righting the Wrongs: Tackling Health Inequities” on January 19...

    Read “Health Equity Summit Recap”

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    Anti-Ableist Medical Education: Meeting the Challenges

    Hastings Center Issue Brief [download] Liz Bowen, Emily Cleveland-Manchanda, Peppar E.P. Cyr, Rosemarie Garland-Thomson, Susan Havercamp, Kristi Kirschner, Rebecca Kronk, Lisa M. Meeks, Peter Poullos, Zoie Clarise Sheets, Dorothy W....

    Read “Anti-Ableist Medical Education: Meeting the Challenges”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Plan, Safeguard, Care: An Ethical Framework for Health Care Institutions Responding to Immigrant Enforcement Actions

    The framework below outlines three foundational ethical duties of health care institutions that can be enacted by leaders through policies, processes, and communication with their workforce: (1) the duty to plan for foreseeable situations with impact on patient care and institutional operations, (2) the duty to safeguard patient populations and the health care workforce, and (3) the duty of care, long understood as nonabandonment of patients.

    Read “Plan, Safeguard, Care: An Ethical Framework for Health Care Institutions Responding to Immigrant Enforcement Actions”

  • Hastings Center News

    Remembering Nancy Neveloff Dubler (1941-2024)

    Nancy Neveloff Dubler, a Hastings Center fellow whose pathbreaking work shaped the field of medical ethics, died on April 14. Dubler worked on a wide range of bioethics topics, but...

    Read “Remembering Nancy Neveloff Dubler (1941-2024)”

  • Page

    New in Ethics & Human Research, November-December 2021 Issue: Pregnant Participants in Research

    Institutional review boards can be inconsistent and can lack transparency in decision-making. In this issue of Ethics & Human Research, Andrea Seykora, Director of Public Policy and Legal Affairs at...

    Read “New in Ethics & Human Research, November-December 2021 Issue: Pregnant Participants in Research”

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    New in Ethics & Human Research, September-October 2021 Issue: Pregnant Participants in Research

    Pregnant people are often excluded from research without clear justification, even when there is little harm to the fetus in minimal‐risk research. In this issue of Ethics & Human Research,...

    Read “New in Ethics & Human Research, September-October 2021 Issue: Pregnant Participants in Research”

  • Hastings Center News

    Improving Access Key to Improving Health Equity

    Improving access to health care is critical to improving health equity, stated health care leaders  at a panel at the health equity summit sponsored by The Hastings Center earlier this...

    Read “Improving Access Key to Improving Health Equity”

  • SPECIAL EVENTS

    Re-opening the Nation, a Series of Hastings Conversations

    Read “Re-opening the Nation, a Series of Hastings Conversations”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Advancing Maternal Health Equity with Data Transparency: The Case of Texas

    Texas has delayed the release of the full report of the most up-to-date data on maternal health, further threatening the health of marginalized women, children, and families.

    Read “Advancing Maternal Health Equity with Data Transparency: The Case of Texas”

  • COVID-19

    We Must Test, and Do It Differently, to Re-open the Nation

    Read “We Must Test, and Do It Differently, to Re-open the Nation”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    From Gene-Edited Embryos to Covid: China Faces Regulatory and Ethical Challenges

    Over the last two years, China has updated some regulations on human genetic engineering and assisted reproduction and established a national committee to guide and supervise bioethics nationwide. But there are legal gaps in some of the regulations and tension between competing values: the desire to encourage new research and to potentially inhibit it by imposing stricter ethics regulations.

    Read “From Gene-Edited Embryos to Covid: China Faces Regulatory and Ethical Challenges”

  • Hastings Center News

    Relational Public Health: Pandemic Policies that Support Health Equity

    Federally Qualified Health Centers—federally funded nonprofit primary care centers—were critical points of access for underserved patients during the Covid pandemic, administering 61% of their Covid vaccinations to people of color,...

    Read “Relational Public Health: Pandemic Policies that Support Health Equity”

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    TRANSCRIPT: Unpacking Neglected Factors to Ensure Impact

    February 7, 2023 Transcription by machine — may contain errors Elizabeth Lanphier Want to welcome you to today’s second installment of Bioethics with Bigger Impact. I’m Elizabeth Lanphier. I’m a coeditor of...

    Read “TRANSCRIPT: Unpacking Neglected Factors to Ensure Impact”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    The Price of Going Back to Work Too Soon

    Read “The Price of Going Back to Work Too Soon”

  • From Bioethics Briefings

    Pandemics: The Ethics of Mandatory and Voluntary Interventions

    [This chapter is adapted from “Influenza Pandemic,” by Alexandra Minna Stern and Howard Markel, in From Birth to Death and Bench to Clinic: The Hastings Center Bioethics Briefing Book for...

    Read “Pandemics: The Ethics of Mandatory and Voluntary Interventions”

  • Page

    Re-Opening the Nation: What Values Should Guide Us?

    Read “Re-Opening the Nation: What Values Should Guide Us?”

  • Hastings Center News

    Impact of Racism on Health Framed in New Briefing

    A new primer frames the threat racism poses to public health, stating that health equity in general is compromised when any group doesn’t have the resources needed for health. “Racism...

    Read “Impact of Racism on Health Framed in New Briefing”

  • Hastings Center News

    Rebuilding Trust in Health Care and Science

    While confidence in many institutions has been declining for decades, the Covid-19 pandemic exposed the breakdown in trust in health care and science. A new Hastings Center special report on...

    Read “Rebuilding Trust in Health Care and Science”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Please Don’t (Need to) Use My Work

    I helped develop guidelines for the ethical allocation of scarce resources during a public health emergency, such as a pandemic..I hope my contributions have an impact. I especially hope to see my work used since it emphasizes the perspectives of minority and underserved communities, who tend to have less voice in health policy. But now I find myself dreading the use of my work.

    Read “Please Don’t (Need to) Use My Work”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Committing to Fight Racism

    We have reached a very sad, painful moment in the United States. It feels like a cascade of calamities, one compounding the next. An infectious disease pandemic that we cannot yet cure has precipitated an economic crisis. An episode of police brutality against a black man has added the name George Floyd to a long list of victims of unfair policing practices in black communities. Bioethicists have not been doing enough in our professional capacities to actively denounce or address the persistent problems of structural racism. We invite our fellow bioethics colleagues to join us in candid, uncomfortable conversations about what we can and should be doing differently.

    Read “Committing to Fight Racism”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Structural Racism, White Fragility, and Ventilator Rationing Policies

    It’s been painful to watch health leaders twist themselves into moral knots denying that recently created ventilator rationing guidance will differentially affect Blacks, Latinx, and other people of color. On television, in newspapers, and on listservs, when the predicted disproportionate impacts of these policies are raised, some bioethicists-often white, stonewall. Or repeat a policy’s assertions that race, ethnicity, disability, etc. are irrelevant to care decisions. Or default to the intent of the policymakers.

    Read “Structural Racism, White Fragility, and Ventilator Rationing Policies”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Amid the Pandemic and Racial Injustice, Greater Empathy in Medical School

    Empathy does not need to dissipate as we endure medical training. Both the pandemic and the national reckoning over racial injustice and police brutality have touched every aspect of life as we know it, and medical training and education have been no exception.

    Read “Amid the Pandemic and Racial Injustice, Greater Empathy in Medical School”

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    Delivering in Another Tumultuous Year

    In 2021, as the country scrambled to decide how to allocate the Covid-19 vaccine, Hastings Center research scholar Nancy Berlinger led a national team to produce detailed guidance on vaccine ethics....

    Read “Delivering in Another Tumultuous Year”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Unresolved Grief is Eating Away at Us

    In most ways, 2023 was a return to normal. Schools were fully back in person; hybrid work was old hat; travel rebounded. But people are easily agitated. I think in our desire to regain a sense of normalcy we have not grieved properly for the losses and hardships of the past four years.

    Read “Unresolved Grief is Eating Away at Us”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Clinicians Have a Moral Duty to Care for All Patients–Including Lockdown Protesters

    Protesters questioning the ongoing need for lockdown measures aimed at controlling Covid19 are marching to make their concerns known, in some cases with arms and other military paraphernalia. Some ethicists think these protectors should sign a pledge to forego scarce medical care in the name of their political ideas. We disagree.

    Read “Clinicians Have a Moral Duty to Care for All Patients–Including Lockdown Protesters”

  • Hastings Center News

    Dr. Fauci on Public Trust in Science

    Dr. Anthony Fauci and Mildred Solomon explored the ethical issues raised by the erosion of trust in science in a virtual discussion hosted by The Hastings Center on November 19. The nation’s top infectious diseases official and the Hastings president looked at how we can improve public understanding of complex scientific issues in this highly polarized, fraught time.

    Read “Dr. Fauci on Public Trust in Science”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Making Vaccine Appointments Is Tearing Us Apart

    The Covid-19 vaccine rollout is currently a hub of individual, sociopolitical, and ethical activity.  As we watch the numbers of daily doses administered rising, we may feel engaged in a...

    Read “Making Vaccine Appointments Is Tearing Us Apart”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Resisting Public Health Measures, Then and Now

    One of the most surprising aspects of the Covid-19 pandemic for those of us who teach the history of public health is how unwilling many Americans have been to adopt health measures to protect others. Over the Thanksgiving holiday, tens of millions of Americans traveled, despite the fact that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urged them to stay home and the overall death rate from the coronavirus is approaching 300,000. Should recent events make us revisit aspects of the history of public health? And how can these stories inform future public health efforts during pandemics?

    Read “Resisting Public Health Measures, Then and Now”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Quiet Quitting Undermines Human Flourishing

    Quiet quitting, the trend in which people do only the minimum in their jobs, has captured attention in the news and on social media. More than half of U.S. workers are quiet quitting, according to a recent Gallup poll, and most of them are in their 20s and 30s. I was discussing this trend with my bioethics colleagues, and we considered the ethical implications for people’s well-being.

    Read “Quiet Quitting Undermines Human Flourishing”

  • From Our Journals

    Equitably Sharing the Benefits and Burdens of Research: Covid‐19 Raises the Stakes

    Read “Equitably Sharing the Benefits and Burdens of Research: Covid‐19 Raises the Stakes”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Who Will Be There to Care If There Are No More Nurses?

    The pandemic has laid bare the significant shortcomings of a health system rooted in an unsustainable financial model that exploits the physical and emotional labor of its nurses.

    Read “Who Will Be There to Care If There Are No More Nurses?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Public Reason, Public Schools, and Mask Mandates

    In South Carolina, where I live, we are not just ignoring good arguments, but actually legislating on the basis of bad ones. The budget rule, Proviso 1.108, threatens the funding of schools that require masks.

    Read “Public Reason, Public Schools, and Mask Mandates”

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    Vaccine Access, Vaccine Hesitancy: Challenges to Herd Immunity

    If the United States is to achieve herd immunity, at least 75-85% of the population will need to be vaccinated, yet there are many different kinds of barriers to overcome....

    Read “Vaccine Access, Vaccine Hesitancy: Challenges to Herd Immunity”

  • Our Team

    Reed V. Tuckson

    Reed V. Tuckson is a co-convener of the Coalition for Trust in Health and Science, which is dedicated to bringing together the entire health-related ecosystem to address mistrust and misinformation....

    Read “Reed V. Tuckson”

  • From Our Journals

    Why Challenge Trials of SARS‐CoV‐2 Vaccines Could Be Ethical Despite Risk of Severe Adverse Events

    Read “Why Challenge Trials of SARS‐CoV‐2 Vaccines Could Be Ethical Despite Risk of Severe Adverse Events”

  • Page

    TRANSCRIPT: Can AI Improve Healthcare for Everyone?

    September 13, 2023 Transcript automatically generated and may contain errors Briana Lopez-Patino: Hey? Hello! Welcome! Just wanted to remind you all that the audience is not audible or visible. But...

    Read “TRANSCRIPT: Can AI Improve Healthcare for Everyone?”

  • Hastings Center News

    Reed V. Tuckson Joins Hastings Board

    The Hastings Center welcomes Reed V. Tuckson, MD, FACP, to its board of directors. Dr. Tuckson is a co-convener of the Coalition for Trust in Health and Science, which is...

    Read “Reed V. Tuckson Joins Hastings Board”

  • Page

    Ethics and Neonatal Care

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: Neonatal Care Advances in the care of critically ill newborns over the last 40 years have resulted in the ability to save...

    Read “Ethics and Neonatal Care”

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    Hastings Center Report Submission Guidelines

    General Manuscript Submission and Review The Hastings Center Report takes a broad understanding of bioethics. We welcome manuscript submissions that address social and ethical issues in health care, the life sciences, and...

    Read “Hastings Center Report Submission Guidelines”

  • Hastings Center News

    Hastings Center Welcomes 14 New Fellows

    The Hastings Center is pleased to announce the election of 14 new Fellows.

    Read “Hastings Center Welcomes 14 New Fellows”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Disabusing the Disability Critique of the New York State Task Force Report on Ventilator Allocation

    I am a member of the New York State Task Force on Life and the Law and helped write its 2015 guidelines on the allocation of ventilators during a public health emergency. The position outlined by the Task Force report has been a point of confusion in the media. I don't believe that the Task Force recommendations discriminate against people with disabilities.

    Read “Disabusing the Disability Critique of the New York State Task Force Report on Ventilator Allocation”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Health Equity Without Ethics Perpetuates Marginalization

    To eliminate a quality metric for clinical ethics is at odds with good clinical practice and it reinforces structural inequality.

    Read “Health Equity Without Ethics Perpetuates Marginalization”

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    Ethics and Enhancing Humans

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: Enhancing Humans What counts as enhancement is not clear because what counts as normal is itself ambiguous. Enhancement technologies have the potential...

    Read “Ethics and Enhancing Humans”

  • Our Team

    Virginia A. Brown

    Virginia A. Brown is a research scholar in social justice and population health. She joined The Hastings Center for Bioethics in September 2023 from the University of Texas at Austin...

    Read “Virginia A. Brown”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Say Their Names: Unclaimed Bodies and Untrustworthiness in Medical Science

    A recent NBC investigative series titled “Dealing the Dead" revealed that thousands of unclaimed bodies were used by the University of North Texas Health Science Center for scientific research and medical education, and to generate profit. These findings raise important ethical questions around the need for ongoing transparency and accountability concerning the use of the deceased in medical research and education.

    Read “Say Their Names: Unclaimed Bodies and Untrustworthiness in Medical Science”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Reckoning with Anti-Black Racism in Bioethics: Key Takeaways

    The field of bioethics has a moral responsibility to respond to the continued racial and health inequities confronting Black, Indigenous, and other people of color. Along with several colleagues, we formed an antiracism task force to interrogate that moral responsibility. Here are key takeaways from a recent panel discussion that we organized.

    Read “Reckoning with Anti-Black Racism in Bioethics: Key Takeaways”

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    2022-23 Sadler Scholars

    Donald Carter, MBA, MDivDegree Program: DBe, Bioethics, Loyola University Chicagohe/him/his About me: I am a native of Arkansas, and through participation in Upward Bound, a Federal TRIO program for precollege...

    Read “2022-23 Sadler Scholars”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Should Ethicists Be at the Table in Public Health Policy Deliberations?

    In a recent article in The New England Journal of Medicine, Ezekiel Emanuel and colleagues clearly illustrate the relevance of ethical considerations to policy deliberations concerning public health emergencies. But do ethicists belong at the table?

    Read “Should Ethicists Be at the Table in Public Health Policy Deliberations?”

  • Page

    Public Trust in Science

    HASTINGS CONVERSATIONS: A SERIES Dr. Anthony Fauci explored the ethical issues raised by the erosion of trust in science in a new virtual discussion hosted by The Hastings Center. The...

    Read “Public Trust in Science”

  • Page

    Communicating Ethical Challenges in Crises:

    Bioethics With Bigger Impact November 15, 2022 Event transcript Perspectives in Biology and Medicine The chaos that enveloped the Covid-19 response and the loss of trust in experts has laid...

    Read “Communicating Ethical Challenges in Crises:”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Do New York State’s Ventilator Allocation Guidelines Place Chronic Ventilator Users at Risk? Clarification Needed

    There is a lack of clarity about the New York State Task Force guidelines on ventilator allocation. I believe disability rights concerns regarding the recommendations on chronic ventilator users are well-founded. This lack of clarity may cost lives.

    Read “Do New York State’s Ventilator Allocation Guidelines Place Chronic Ventilator Users at Risk? Clarification Needed”

  • Our Team

    Nancy Berlinger

    Nancy Berlinger is a senior research scholar at The Hastings Center for Bioethics and a Hastings Center fellow. Her training is in the humanities. Her current scholarship and empirical research...

    Read “Nancy Berlinger”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    AI Meets Bioethics Literature: How Did It Do?

    How accurately could AI translate complex medical information for lay persons? How well could it identify and distill the ethical dilemmas posed by research findings? What safeguards could be used to prevent the use of AI for misinformation and disinformation? We performed a small nonscientific experiment.

    Read “AI Meets Bioethics Literature: How Did It Do?”

  • Hastings Center News

    Hastings Center Resumes Visiting Scholars Program

    The Hastings Center’s longstanding visiting scholars program, which was halted during the Covid-19 pandemic, is back. Applications for stays are now open. The program enables scholars from institutions around the...

    Read “Hastings Center Resumes Visiting Scholars Program”

  • Hastings Center News

    Bioethics Chats: Arthur Derse

    Welcome to our inaugural chat, the first in a series of informal conversations between Hastings Center President Vardit Ravitsky and a Hastings Center fellow or other distinguished bioethicist about a...

    Read “Bioethics Chats: Arthur Derse”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Thinking Beyond “The Border”: American Bioethics and the Repair of U.S. Immigration Policy

    How should the American bioethics community respond to the latest “crisis at the border,” focused on record numbers of unaccompanied minors – children and teenagers traveling from the Northern Triangle...

    Read “Thinking Beyond “The Border”: American Bioethics and the Repair of U.S. Immigration Policy”

  • Hastings Center News

    Hastings Center Launches Bioethics Timeline

    From AIDS to Covid-19, how have pandemics and epidemics shaped health policy and bedside decision-making? How have major medical societies’ statements on discrimination and racial justice evolved over the decades?...

    Read “Hastings Center Launches Bioethics Timeline”

  • Our Team

    Dara Richardson-Heron

    Dr. Richardson-Heron is a former Fortune 100 corporate executive, board director, physician, and public speaker with more than 25 years of leadership excellence in health care and the corporate, government,...

    Read “Dara Richardson-Heron”

  • CALLAHAN LECTURE

    Advancing Health Equity, and Community

    An online event. February 9, 2021 at 12pm EST The Covid-19 pandemic has made longstanding, seemingly intractable inequities painfully visible. In addition to widespread suffering, African Americans and LatinX communities...

    Read “Advancing Health Equity, and Community”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Honoring My Friend’s Last Words

    I’ll always feel like I missed an opportunity by sending his call to voicemail. I had no idea that this would be my last opportunity to speak with him.

    Read “Honoring My Friend’s Last Words”

  • Page

    Ethics and Environment

    Selected resources from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: Hastings Center Bioethics BriefingThe issues that arise in environmental health ethics are complex, multifaceted, dynamic, and global in scope. Finding satisfactory solutions...

    Read “Ethics and Environment”

  • Hastings Center News

    To Improve Health Equity, Look at Politics

    Daniel Dawes, a key figure in shaping the Affordable Care Act, urged the audience at last month’s health care summit to look upstream and focus on the political and structural...

    Read “To Improve Health Equity, Look at Politics”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Confusing Equity for Ethics Standards: Where Do We Go from Here?

    The country’s leading hospital accreditation body recently eliminated the only performance standard that governed clinical ethics services. We argue the removal of the ethics standard requires additional review, and we have three recommendations.

    Read “Confusing Equity for Ethics Standards: Where Do We Go from Here?”

  • Page

    Press Release: New in the Hastings Center Report: Ethical Challenges of the Opioid Crisis

    The nationwide surge in drug abuse predates the Covid-19 pandemic but has risen to new highs during it. Causes of the crisis–physician prescribing habits and societal problems like poverty and...

    Read “Press Release: New in the Hastings Center Report: Ethical Challenges of the Opioid Crisis”

  • Hastings Center News

    New Resource: The Hastings Center Bioethics Timeline

    From AIDS to Covid-19, how have pandemics and epidemics shaped health policy and bedside decision-making? How have major medical societies’ statements on discrimination and racial justice evolved over the decades?...

    Read “New Resource: The Hastings Center Bioethics Timeline”

  • Page

    Ethics and Medical Aid In Dying

    Selected resources on medical aid in dying and euthanasia from The Hastings Center. Bioethics Briefings: Physician-Assisted Death This briefing is concerned mainly with medical aid-in-dying in the United States, where...

    Read “Ethics and Medical Aid In Dying”

  • Page

    For The Media

    Please direct media queries to:Susan Gilbert, communications directorgilberts@thehastingscenter.org845-424-4040, ext. 244 Hastings Center News:Read the News Archive About the Hastings Center for Bioethics:The Hastings Center for Bioethics is a nonpartisan ethics...

    Read “For The Media”

  • Our Team

    Mildred Z. Solomon

    Mildred Solomon has an international reputation for her research on, and advocacy for, wiser health care and science policy. She was President of The Hastings Center from 2012 to June...

    Read “Mildred Z. Solomon”

  • SPRING APPEAL

    Support our Work

    This has been a year like no other. For all of us. Challenges raised by the pandemic, including tragic reminders of the health inequities deeply embedded in our culture, underscore...

    Read “Support our Work”

  • SPECIAL EVENT

    Re-Opening the Nation: Privacy, Surveillance, and Digital Tools for Contact Tracing

    Read “Re-Opening the Nation: Privacy, Surveillance, and Digital Tools for Contact Tracing”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Three Lessons from Leah

    Leah Zallman's meticulous research helps us all to tell the story of what immigrants give to this nation and what they should receive from this nation.

    Read “Three Lessons from Leah”

  • Page

    Supporting Information

    Verbeke, K., T. Krawczyk, D. Baeyens, J. Piasecki, and P. Borry, “What’s in a Lie? How Researchers Judge the Justifiability of Deception,” Ethics & Human Research 47, no. 3 (2025):...

    Read “Supporting Information”

  • Our Team

    Vardit Ravitsky

    Vardit Ravitsky, PhD, is the President and CEO of The Hastings Center for Bioethics, an independent, nonpartisan bioethics research institute that is among the most prestigious bioethics and health policy...

    Read “Vardit Ravitsky”

  • From Bioethics Briefings

    Environment, Ethics, and Human Health

    Framing the Issue Many of the most challenging ethical questions of our time address interactions between human health and the environment: How can we balance protection for the environment with...

    Read “Environment, Ethics, and Human Health”

  • Page

    Bioethics in Community Health: Understanding Ethical Challenges of Community Health Centers

    Principal Investigators: Carolyn P. Neuhaus, Nancy Berlinger Funder: Greenwall Foundation, Making A Difference Program Start date: 2022 This national study of nonprofit community health centers in the United States will...

    Read “Bioethics in Community Health: Understanding Ethical Challenges of Community Health Centers”

  • Hastings Center News

    The Big Question: New Series Begins

    The Hastings Center is teaming up with the Museum of Science in Boston for Season 2 of The Big Question, which premiered on February 24, kicking off with a conversation...

    Read “The Big Question: New Series Begins”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Housing an Aging Society: Five Priorities

    While home and neighborhood environments matter to all people, older age brings particular considerations related to housing cost, safety and accessibility, neighborhood livability, links between the home and supportive services,...

    Read “Housing an Aging Society: Five Priorities”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    The Place in “Aging in Place”: Housing Equity in Late Life

    Most older Americans want to age “in place” – in the community, not an institution. But there's a poor fit between our nation’s housing stock and our aging demographics.

    Read “The Place in “Aging in Place”: Housing Equity in Late Life”

  • Hastings Center News

    New Project: Ethical Challenges of Community Health Centers

    The Hastings Center has launched a national study of nonprofit community health centers in the United States to learn about and describe the nature and extent of the ethical challenges...

    Read “New Project: Ethical Challenges of Community Health Centers”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    An Evergreen Metaphor: Strachan Donnelley, Dan Callahan, and Environmental Ethics

    The devastation of Hurricane Ida and the global threats of climate change are not on the fringe of bioethics. They call to mind the language of priority-setting typical of bioethics discourse. Who lives and who dies? What can be accomplished with prevention and more levees? And if more are built, how do we set priorities with limited resources?

    Read “An Evergreen Metaphor: Strachan Donnelley, Dan Callahan, and Environmental Ethics”

  • Page

    Support Our Work

    Read “Support Our Work”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Popular Culture and Bioethics: Severance

    Severance, a popular Emmy Award-winning show streaming on Apple TV+, is a rich cultural artifact. It concerns a team of office workers at a morally questionable company that performs brain surgery on employees to sever the consciousness of their work and personal lives. The four of us were so taken by the show that we wrote these reflections on its important ethical themes.

    Read “Popular Culture and Bioethics: Severance”

  • Page

    Request for Proposals from Fundraising Consultants

    The Hastings Center invites proposals from fundraising consultants experienced in leading feasibility studies and strategically planning and advising nonprofit organizations in conducting endowment-focused campaigns. Fundraising consultants who identify as members...

    Read “Request for Proposals from Fundraising Consultants”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Tribute to Robert M. Veatch: Human Rights and Other Commitments

    Robert M. Veatch, a bioethics pioneer and the first research associate at The Hastings Center, died on November 9. An overarching theme was his commitment to human rights.

    Read “Tribute to Robert M. Veatch: Human Rights and Other Commitments”

  • Page

    Transcript | Re-Opening the Nation: What Values Should Guide Us?

    Read “Transcript | Re-Opening the Nation: What Values Should Guide Us?”

  • Hastings Center News

    A “Breakdown in Humanity”

    Pulitzer Prize-winning author Isabel Wilkerson last month told an audience of over 2,600 people at the health equity summit co-convened by The Hastings Center that one of the consistent outcomes...

    Read “A “Breakdown in Humanity””

  • Hastings Center News

    Ethics and Pandemic Policies: Democracy in Crisis

    Ethics guidance during the Covid-19 pandemic has been valuable in informing some health policies and practices, such as oversight of research and crisis standards of care. But it has been...

    Read “Ethics and Pandemic Policies: Democracy in Crisis”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Where is Clinical Ethics in the Revised Hospital Accreditation Standards?

    The Joint Commission, which accredits our nation's hospitals, eliminated the sole element of performance that governed clinical ethics services. This decision impedes equity and undercuts progress toward fostering ethical practice in health care.

    Read “Where is Clinical Ethics in the Revised Hospital Accreditation Standards?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Bruce Springsteen: The Latest Celebrity DWI

    It was especially disappointing to read about Bruce Springsteen’s recent arrest for suspicion of driving while intoxicated (DWI). Here's hoping the famous rocker will use his arrest to refocus attention on a risky and dangerous behavior that is thoroughly preventable.

    Read “Bruce Springsteen: The Latest Celebrity DWI”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Bioethicists and Health Care Institutions Must Act Against Florida’s Anti-Immigrant Law

    Florida’s new anti-immigrant law, SB 1718, has escaped widespread notice, despite the way it will undermine the mission—and core identity--of not-for-profit hospitals as caring institutions that promote the health of the community. Bioethics and health care institutions must take action.

    Read “Bioethicists and Health Care Institutions Must Act Against Florida’s Anti-Immigrant Law”

  • CALLAHAN LECTURE

    Advancing Social Justice, Health Equity, and Community

    The Covid-19 pandemic has made longstanding, seemingly intractable inequities painfully visible. In addition to widespread suffering, African Americans and Latinx communities are dying at three times the rate of White...

    Read “Advancing Social Justice, Health Equity, and Community”

  • Page

    2021 Center Highlights

    In 2021, as the country scrambled to decide how to allocate the Covid-19 vaccine,  Hastings Center research scholar Nancy Berlinger led a national team to produce detailed guidance on vaccine...

    Read “2021 Center Highlights”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Turning Lemons into Lemonade: Studying the Emotional Impact of Clinical Ethics Consultation

    At some point, it occurred to me that I could actually research the emotional burden of ethics cases on clinical ethicists. This was an epiphany.

    Read “Turning Lemons into Lemonade: Studying the Emotional Impact of Clinical Ethics Consultation”

  • Page

    Hastings Center Names Vardit Ravitsky New President

    March 29, 2023 — The Hastings Center Board of Trustees announced that Vardit Ravitsky, PhD, a leading bioethicist whose career has focused on the ethical, legal, and social implications of...

    Read “Hastings Center Names Vardit Ravitsky New President”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Contemporary Circus Draws on Ethics to Support Diversity

    Even though the circus exists in the same world as theater and movies, it has been largely exempt from public criticism, apart from accusations of animal cruelty. But under the broad rubric of “contemporary circus,” this familiar entertainment genre is distancing itself from its past and creating a new and vibrant art form. And underlying this transformation is an ethical commitment to social justice, inclusion, and equity.

    Read “Contemporary Circus Draws on Ethics to Support Diversity”

  • Hastings Center News

    Advancing Health Equity is “Not Rocket Science”

    A close relationship with patients that holistically addresses medical and social needs is crucial to advancing health equity, said Marshall Chin, a professor of healthcare ethics at the University of...

    Read “Advancing Health Equity is “Not Rocket Science””

  • NEWS

    Center Names Vardit Ravitsky New President

    The Hastings Center Board of Trustees today announced that Vardit Ravitsky, PhD, a leading bioethicist whose career has focused on the ethical, legal, and social implications of emerging technologies, will...

    Read “Center Names Vardit Ravitsky New President”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Bioethics in the Margins

    Bioethics in the Margins is a new podcast that addresses fundamental moral issues facing society that don’t get the attention they deserve.

    Read “Bioethics in the Margins”

  • In the Media

    Covid Exposes the Inflated Promise of Genomic Medicine

    The Covid crisis “offers a supremely unwished-for opportunity to . . . reconsider the hope and money we invest in genetics,” writes senior research scholar Erik Parens in the Scientific American blog.

    Read “Covid Exposes the Inflated Promise of Genomic Medicine”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Could Alarm Over Genetic Manipulation Get in the Way of Environmental Conservation?

    The American chestnut is basically defunct, unless science can rescue it. Genetic manipulation may be the answer.

    Read “Could Alarm Over Genetic Manipulation Get in the Way of Environmental Conservation?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Race, Research, and Bioethics: The Chapatis Studies

    New inquiry examines ethics of 1960's experiments involving Punjabi immigrants in the United Kingdom and radioactive chapatis.

    Read “Race, Research, and Bioethics: The Chapatis Studies”

  • YEAR IN REVIEW

    2023 – A Year of Transformation

    This year was full of transformations—celebration of past accomplishments and building toward the future. The Hastings Center had a changing of the guard, welcoming Vardit Ravitsky as our new president...

    Read “2023 – A Year of Transformation”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Involuntary Withdrawal: A Bridge Too Far?

    Despite its intended use as a treatment of last resort, some patients can remain on ECMO for weeks or months. And some are awake, alert, and capable of medical decision-making. RD was one such patient.

    Read “Involuntary Withdrawal: A Bridge Too Far?”

  • Page

    Securing Health in a Troubled Time

    Forty million people live in poverty in the United States, a reality at odds with our great wealth and espoused principles. Health inequities, including dramatically decreased life expectancies and severe...

    Read “Securing Health in a Troubled Time”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Continuous Health Monitoring: Greater Self-Knowledge or TMI?

    For millions of health-conscious Americans, digital technology has been a boon, providing increasingly sophisticated fitness trackers. Researchers speak excitedly about a new frontier of “continuous health monitoring,” with the potential to detect diseases and aliments in their incipient stages. It also raises a host of disturbing questions about health surveillance. Will these devices really empower us? Will they compromise us as autonomous individuals?

    Read “Continuous Health Monitoring: Greater Self-Knowledge or TMI?”

  • Page

    TRANSCRIPT: Towards Navigating Danger and Promise Together — Editing the Human Genome

    Transcript generated by machine and may contain errors Dani Pacia Hello, everyone. Welcome to the Hastings Center event toward navigating danger and Promise together editing the human genome. This discussion...

    Read “TRANSCRIPT: Towards Navigating Danger and Promise Together — Editing the Human Genome”

  • Page

    Advancing Housing & Health Equity for Older Adults

    Event 2: “Learning from Aging in Place Initiatives” In the Covid moment, community-based initiatives throughout the United States pivoted to meet the needs of older adults at home. This virtual...

    Read “Advancing Housing & Health Equity for Older Adults”

  • Page

    Securing Health in a Troubled Time

    Read “Securing Health in a Troubled Time”

  • Page

    What is Bioethics?

    Bioethics is the interdisciplinary study of ethical, legal, and social issues arising in the life sciences and health care. Though it has roots tracing back decades or generations earlier, modern...

    Read “What is Bioethics?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Clinical Ethics and a President’s Capacity: Balancing Privacy and Public Interest

    The Biden Administration is struggling with a dilemma that has a clinical ethics component. Where does the President’s right to privacy about his health end and the public’s right to know begin? This question has recurred throughout American history and, unfortunately, has often been answered the wrong way--with deception. Clinical ethics norms and recent legal precedent offer important insights for responding to this ethical dilemma with much-needed transparency in a way that respects all parties involved.

    Read “Clinical Ethics and a President’s Capacity: Balancing Privacy and Public Interest”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Griefbots Are Here, Raising Questions of Privacy and Well-being

    Hugh Culber is talking to his abuela, asking why her mofongo always came out better than his even though he is using her recipe. She replies that it never came...

    Read “Griefbots Are Here, Raising Questions of Privacy and Well-being”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    In Search of an Ethical Constraint on Hospital Revenue

    Hospitals' tactics for maximizing revenue may be legal, but they raise ethical concerns.

    Read “In Search of an Ethical Constraint on Hospital Revenue”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Philanthropy is Not Enough: Oil and Gas Giants Must Consider Medical Ethics

    Given the well-known environmental and health risks of oil and gas drilling, oil and gas giants that enter developing nations routinely offset these risks with charitable investments. Are these investments sufficient? Do the funds go where they are needed? Answering this question raises ethical issues that need greater attention.

    Read “Philanthropy is Not Enough: Oil and Gas Giants Must Consider Medical Ethics”

  • Our Team

    Danielle Pacia

    Danielle M. Pacia focuses on bioethics topics related to individualized therapies, community health, and the ever-changing landscape of reproductive health care in the United States. She is interested in high-level...

    Read “Danielle Pacia”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    My Mom’s Myeloma and the Fire-Breathing Chimaera

    Just one month ago, my mom received an intravenous infusion of CAR T-cells, which have become mythical creatures in my imagination.

    Read “My Mom’s Myeloma and the Fire-Breathing Chimaera”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Regulation of Software as a Medical Device: Opportunity for Bioethics

    In January, right before President Biden took office, the Food and Drug Administration proposed permanently exempting “software as a medical device” from regulatory review. The agency waived the approval process last year to streamline regulatory oversight during the Covid emergency. But the growing use of artificial intelligence programs and digital devices in health care raises safety and ethical concerns that require more attention. The Biden administration put the proposal on hold for now. Meanwhile, bioethicists should weigh in as the FDA reviews its action plan.

    Read “Regulation of Software as a Medical Device: Opportunity for Bioethics”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Improving Linguistic Justice and Accessibility in Bioethics Work

    Bioethicists should practice linguistic justice, making our work accessible to people by using relatable language. It's key to improving health justice.

    Read “Improving Linguistic Justice and Accessibility in Bioethics Work”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Bioethics and Black Lives: A Call for Bioethics to Speak Against Racial Injustice

    George Floyd could not breathe while his neck was trapped under the knee of a police officer for nearly nine minutes. Yet despite the impressive scholarship of bioethics on ventilation and other technologies that prolong human breathing capabilities, it is largely silent on the suffocating effects of racism. Bioethics must speak out against racial injustice.

    Read “Bioethics and Black Lives: A Call for Bioethics to Speak Against Racial Injustice”

  • Page

    TRANSCRIPT: Anti-Black Racism, Health & Health Care

    This transcript was generated by computer and may contain errors. Aashna Lal, The Hastings Center Thank you all for joining us today. Welcome to anti-black racism, health and health care....

    Read “TRANSCRIPT: Anti-Black Racism, Health & Health Care”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Is the Coronavirus Pandemic Accelerating Bioethics Nationalism?

    The global crisis created by the coronavirus pandemic and the rush to create and distribute a vaccine widely hoped to be a “silver bullet” that can facilitate a return to “normalcy” threatens to upend seven decades of assumptions about bioethical norms.

    Read “Is the Coronavirus Pandemic Accelerating Bioethics Nationalism?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    C.D.C.’s Latest Mask Guidance: Science, Politics, and Public Health

    The C.D.C.'s latest policy guidance that people who have been fully vaccinated against the coronavirus virus no longer need to wear face masks indoors gets the science right, but policymaking wrong.

    Read “C.D.C.’s Latest Mask Guidance: Science, Politics, and Public Health”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Ethics of Placebo Controls in Coronavirus Vaccine Trials

    Multiple candidate vaccines for coronavirus are being evaluated scientifically in a process of unprecedented speed, and thousands of individuals around the world have volunteered to participate in placebo-controlled phase III field trials. If, or when, one of these candidate vaccines is proved to be safe and effective and receives an emergency use authorization by the Food and Drug Administration, will it continue to be ethical to enroll participants in other coronavirus trials that randomize half of them to a placebo?

    Read “Ethics of Placebo Controls in Coronavirus Vaccine Trials”

  • Page

    Bioethics Briefings

    Hastings Bioethics Briefings contains overviews of issues in bioethics of high public interest, such as abortion, brain injury, organ transplantation, medical aid-in-dying, racism, and stem cell research. The chapters, written by leading ethicists,...

    Read “Bioethics Briefings”

  • SPECIAL EVENT

    Re-Opening the Nation: Should We Turn to Immunity Testing?

    Read “Re-Opening the Nation: Should We Turn to Immunity Testing?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Rugged American Individualism is a Myth, and It’s Killing Us

    The American myth of rugged individualism, which often means “pulling yourself up by your own bootstraps,” is outdated, was never completely accurate. It is on full display during the coronavirus pandemic, contributing to cases and deaths.

    Read “Rugged American Individualism is a Myth, and It’s Killing Us”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Did Russia’s Most Influential Bioethicist Get a Coronavirus Vaccine?

    Along with the announcement that his government had approved Sputnik V, the supposed Russian coronavirus vaccine, Vladimir Putin also indulged in a moment of paternal pride: Wanting to confirm his personal confidence in the vaccine, he mentioned that one of his daughters was among the early recipients. This raises a couple of intriguing questions: Which daughter was it? And why does it matter?

    Read “Did Russia’s Most Influential Bioethicist Get a Coronavirus Vaccine?”

  • Page

    What Is Bioethics?

    Bioethics is the interdisciplinary study of ethical issues arising in the life sciences, health care, technology, and health and science policy. It examines the ethical, legal, and social implications of such...

    Read “What Is Bioethics?”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Coronavirus Mutation Panic

    The headlines are terrifying: A highly contagious new variant of the coronavirus is circulating in England. As the story spread, politicians and media outlets reported a devastating statistic: the new strain is 70% more transmissible than other strains of the virus. This has led to new lockdowns; many border closures; flight cancellations; and people fleeing the U.K. by train, boat, and plane. But is any of this necessary? Is the world suffering from mutation panic?

    Read “Coronavirus Mutation Panic”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Xenotransplantation: Three Areas of Concern

    News of the first transplant of a pig’s heart into a human raises hope that the procedure could one day help alleviate the shortage of organs. But before we forge ahead with xenotransplantation trials, we should be concerned about several issues: the potential to spread pathogens, exploitation of human research participants, and animal welfare.

    Read “Xenotransplantation: Three Areas of Concern”

  • Bioethics Forum Essay

    Pathogens and Humans

    In a 1988 essay on pandemics, Nobel laureate Joshua Lederberg wrote, “We have no guarantee that the natural evolutionary competition of viruses with the human species will always find ourselves the winner.”

    Read “Pathogens and Humans”

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