In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Contributors

Anita L. Allen is the Henry R. Silverman Professor Law and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvanias. Her most recent book is Unpopular Privacy: What Must We Hide (Oxford, 2011).

Jessica Berg teaches law, bioethics, and public health at Case Western Reserve Schools of Law and Medicine. She is the author recently of a white paper for the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality on informed consent for registry studies.

Christy Cummings is a third-year neonatology fellow at Yale-New Haven Children’s Hospital, pursuing a track in bioethics. She participates in the Yale Pediatric Ethics Program and the Yale Pediatric Ethics Committee.

Rebecca Dresser is Daniel Noyes Kirby Professor of Law and professor of ethics in medicine at Washington University in St. Louis.

Nicole Deming teaches bioethics at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. She also works in the Center for Biomedical Ethics at MetroHealth Medical Center.

Ray Fitzpatrick is professor of public health and primary care at the University of Oxford and fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford, and national director for the National Institute for Health Research’s Health Service and Delivery Programme.

Sonia Gowda is a premedical student at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut. For the summer of 2011, she was a research associate at the Children’s Mercy Bioethics Center.

Barry Hoffmaster teaches in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Western Ontario. He is working with Cliff Hooker on a manuscript that develops an account of nonformal reason for ethics that parallels the ways in which nonformal reason functions in science.

Tony Hope is professor of medical ethics at the Ethox Centre in the University of Oxford, a fellow of St. Cross College, and honorary consultant psychiatrist. His most recent book is Empirical Ethics in Psychiatry (Oxford, 2008).

John D. Lantos is professor of pediatrics at University of Missouri, Kansas City, and directs the Children’s Mercy Hospital Bioethics Center. His latest book is Controversial Bodies: Thoughts on the Public Display of Plastinated Corpses (Johns Hopkins, 2011).

Maude LaLiberté is a doctoral student in the biomedical sciences programme, bioethics option, at the University of Montreal. She is a practicing physiotherapist and a clinical assistant professor in the School of Rehabilitation at the University of Montreal, where she teaches professional ethics to physiotherapists.

Anne Stewart is a consultant child and adolescent psychiatrist at the Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust and honorary senior clinical lecturer in the Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford.

Jacinta Tan is a child and adolescent psychiatrist who is also a medical ethicist and ethics researcher. She is a senior research fellow in the Department of Interprofessional Health Studies at the College of Health and Human Sciences, Swansea University. [End Page 48]

...

pdf

Share