Search
Medical Ethics
2013 Bioethics & Philosophy Conference: Saving & Uniting Lives
This announcement came from the NYU Medical Center's Center for Bioethics. I think it is open to all on a first come first seated basis.
2013 Bioethics & Philosophy Conference: Saving & Uniting Lives
Friday, April 12th, 9:00 a.m.
Location: D'Agostino Hall, 110 West 3rd Street, Lipton Hall
A Conference in Honor of William Ruddick
Professor of Philosophy; Arthur Zitrin Professor of Bioethics;
Founding Director, NYU Center for BioethicsDownload Program (PDF)
RSVP Required (Seating will be on a first come first served basis)
Schedule of Sessions
9:00-9:30AM BREAKFAST
Location D'Agostino Hall, 110 West Third Street, Faculty Club9:30-9:45AM OPENING REMARKS
Don Garrett, Chair, Department of Philosophy; Professor of Philosophy, New York University
Dale Jamieson, Director of the Center for Bioethics, the Environmental Studies Program and the Animal Studies Initiative; Professor of Environmental Studies and Philosophy, New York University9:45-11:15AM SESSION I: WRONG TURN AFTER NUREMBERG: QUESTIONING THE POST-WAR CONSENSUS IN RESEARCH ETHICS
Daniel Wikler, Mary B. Saltonstall Professor of Population Ethics; Professor of Ethics and Population Health, Harvard University11:15-11:30AM COFFEE BREAK
Location: D'Agostino Hall, 110 West Third Street, Faculty Club11:30-1:00PM SESSION II: ON THE OTHER HAND: THE ETHICS OF AMBIVALENCE
Amelie Rorty, Lecturer on Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard University1:00-2:30PM LUNCH
Please see the attached map of area restaurants for suggestions on where to have lunch2:30-4:00PM SESSION III: WHO TURNED THE TROLLEY?
Frances Kamm, Littauer Professor of Philosophy & Public Policy; Professor of Philosophy, Harvard University4:00-4:15PM COFFEE BREAK
Location D'Agostino Hall, 110 West Third Street, Faculty Club4:15-5:45PM SESSION IV: EMOTIONS, MEMORY AND RECOGNITION
Jonathan Glover, Professor of Medical Law & Ethics, King’s College; Distinguished Research Fellow, Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics5:45-7:00PM RECEPTION
Location: D'Agostino Hall, 110 West Third Street, Faculty Club
NYU Bioethics Public Lecture-'The Oregon Experience in Physician-Assisted Suicide' w/Peg Brand and Edward Weiser
At a recent meeting I got to hear the head of the Division of Bioethics at New York University, Arthur Caplan, give an excellent lecture. He talked about an extremely important issue which I may write about if I get the chance one of these days and he and I had a good talk afterwards. But in addition to being a great lecture, this also alerted me to the Bioethics department at my place of work and I have been paying a bit more attention to what they do.
Coming up is a public lecture offered by the Division of Bioethics at NYU. The topic is Physician-Assited suicide, an issue I have never really spent much time mulling over but is certainly an interesting and complex issue. Here's the info on the lecture:
Fri. 3/1/13: Bioethics Public Lecture-'The Oregon Experience in Physician-Assisted Suicide' w/Peg Brand and Edward Weiser
The NYU Center for Bioethics Invites You to Attend a Public Lecture by
Peg Brand
Adjunct Instructor, Competition Not Conflict (CNC) Program, School of Law, University of OregonEdward Weiser, MD
Gynecologic Oncologist'The Oregon Experience in Physician-Assisted Suicide'
Friday, March 1, 2013
5 Washington Place, Room 101
5:00-7:00 PM
RSVP required-Reception to followThe role of the physician in the passage of a dying patient can take various forms—simple observation and symptom control, actively causing the death of the patient without the patient’s explicit participation--or true euthanasia, and physician assistance to patients electively pursuing suicide. In 1994, Oregon passed and implemented the first physician-assisted suicide program for terminally ill patients in the U.S. Distinguishing the Oregon experience from traditional notions of physician-assisted dying is the statute’s full acknowledgement of patient autonomy and consent. Predictions by critics anticipating the failure of the program have been discredited by eighteen years of experience and clinical data. Oregon has not become the “suicide destination” of the country, the program has attracted very few patients with detectable psychiatric disease, and the creation of “death panels” devolving into government-directed euthanasia in order to reduce public health care expenditures has not materialized. The process by which this program was successfully instituted had much to do with the demographics of Oregon, the careful education of a voting public by medical and legal experts, and the allying of seemingly disparate groups to lend political support.
BIOGRAPHY:
Peg Brand is adjunct instructor in the Competition Not Conflict (CNC) program of sports conflict resolution at the University of Oregon School of Law where she also teaches bioethics in the Robert D. Clark Honors College. She continues her affilitation with the Philosophy Department at IUPUI (Indiana University Purdue University - Indianapolis) as adjunct associate professor. Most recently, she is editor of Beauty Unlimited (Indiana University Press, 2013).Dr. Ed Weiser is a gynecologic oncologist who retired in 2007 after more than 30 years of practice and 13 years of active duty in the US Navy. He has consulted for Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the National Cancer Institute of the NIH, and served on the faculty at Emory University School of Medicine and the National Naval Medical Center. He has published on women's reproductive health in various journals including Gynecologic Oncology and Obstetrics & Gynecology.
For more information about upcoming events, visit http://bioethics.as.nyu.edu/page/events. read more »



