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In this Issue

Table of Contents

  1. The Triple Helix: Gene, Organism, and Environment (review)
  2. Trudy Kanner
  3. restricted access
  1. So Why Does Animal Experimentation Matter?
  2. Nathan Nobis
  3. restricted access
  1. The Dead Donor Rule and the Concept of Death: Severing the Ties That Bind Them
  2. Elysa R. Koppelman
  3. pp. 1-9
  4. restricted access
  1. The Dead Donor Rule: True by Definition
  2. Robert M. Veatch
  3. pp. 10-11
  4. restricted access
  1. The End of Humanity: Does Circumventing "Death" Help the Cause?
  2. Noam Zohar
  3. pp. 12-13
  4. restricted access
  1. Harming the Dead and Saving the Living
  2. James Lindemann Nelson
  3. pp. 13-15
  4. restricted access
  1. The Theoretical and Practical Importance of the Dead Donor Rule
  2. James J. McCartney
  3. pp. 15-16
  4. restricted access
  1. Eliminating Death
  2. David Steinberg
  3. pp. 17-18
  4. restricted access
  1. Surrogates and Respect for Donors
  2. Bethany Spielman
  3. pp. 18-19
  4. restricted access
  1. Respect for Donor Autonomy and the Dead Donor Rule
  2. Wayne N. Shelton
  3. pp. 20-21
  4. restricted access
  1. Why Being Alive Matters
  2. Jerry Menikoff
  3. pp. 21-22
  4. restricted access
  1. Does the Respect for Donor Rule Respect the Donor?
  2. Denise M. Dudzinski
  3. pp. 23-24
  4. restricted access
  1. "Dead Donor" versus "Respect for Donor" Rule: Putting the Cart before the Horse
  2. D. Micah Hester
  3. pp. 24-26
  4. restricted access
  1. Dead Donors and the "Shortage" of Human Organs: Are We Missing the Point?
  2. Barbara A. Koenig
  3. pp. 26-27
  4. restricted access
  1. Social Pressure and the Organ Harvesting via a Dead Donor Rule
  2. Timothy Lillie
  3. p. 28
  4. restricted access
  1. Death and Donation: A Reply to Koppelman
  2. Sheldon Zink
  3. pp. 29-30
  4. restricted access
  1. The Dead Donor Rule: Not Dead Yet
  2. Laura A. Siminoff
  3. p. 30
  4. restricted access
  1. Death Be Not Political
  2. Howard Trachtman
  3. pp. 31-32
  4. restricted access
  1. Providing Fertility Care to HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: It's Time to Reexamine Healthcare Policy
  2. Mark V. Sauer
  3. pp. 33-40
  4. restricted access
  1. HIV and Assisted Reproductive Technology: Women and Healthcare Policy
  2. Anne Drapkin Lyerly, Ruth R. Faden
  3. pp. 41-43
  4. restricted access
  1. HIV, ARTs, and the ADA
  2. Carl H. Coleman
  3. pp. 43-45
  4. restricted access
  1. Assisted Reproductive Technologies for HIV-Discordant Couples
  2. Ann Duerr, Denise Jamieson
  3. pp. 45-47
  4. restricted access
  1. Providing Fertility Care to HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: A Biologist's Point of View
  2. Deborah Jean Anderson, Joseph A. Politch
  3. pp. 47-49
  4. restricted access
  1. Discordant Bioethics for HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Seeking Infertility Care
  2. Nancy King Reame
  3. pp. 49-50
  4. restricted access
  1. Moral Deliberation about Fertility Treatment for HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples
  2. Rosamond Rhodes
  3. pp. 50-53
  4. restricted access
  1. Assisted Reproduction for HIV Serodiscordant Couples: The Ethical Issues in Perspective
  2. Julian Savulescu
  3. pp. 53-57
  4. restricted access
  1. Reproductive Assistance for HIV-Discordant Couples
  2. Carson Strong
  3. pp. 57-60
  4. restricted access
  1. HIV-discordant Couples and IVF: What is the Question?
  2. Jeffrey P. Spike
  3. pp. 60-62
  4. restricted access
  1. HIV-1, Reproduction, and Justice: What is society's obligation?
  2. Tricha Shivas
  3. pp. 63-64
  4. restricted access
  1. When Character Is More Important Than Intelligence
  2. Stefan Eriksson
  3. pp. 65-67
  4. restricted access
  1. Beyond a Western Bioethics: Voices from the Developing World (review)
  2. Mark J. Cherry
  3. pp. 67-68
  4. restricted access
  1. Contributors
  2. pp. iii-iv
  3. restricted access
  1. Stewards of a Public Trust: Responsible Transplantation Use?
  2. Mark D. Fox
  3. pp. v-vi
  4. restricted access