Home | Hastings Center Report | The Hastings Center | Contact Us | Sign up for Bioethics Forum news and updates | RSS RSS

Bioethics Forum - Diverse Commentary on Issues in Bioethics

Home Articles By Author Articles By Date Articles By Subject
Recent Commentary

HEALTH POLICY
The New Language of Health Care: How’s Your HPIQ?
BY CAROL LEVINE
What do you call a person admitted to a hospital? If you said “patient,” you’re hopelessly out of date. More
HUMAN BODIES
Olympic Problems with Sex Testing
BY ALICE DREGER
Ah, Beijing, where men are men and women are… women until proven otherwise. More
MEDICINE
NIMH Chelation and Autism Study: The Sounds and the Fury
BY SUSAN GILBERT
The role of news wire services is to transmit news to media outlets, but the Associated Press perhaps unwittingly went beyond its job description earlier this month. It ignited a firestorm. More
MEDICINE
The AMA’s Apology: What’s the Benefit?
BY ALICE DREGER
What will require an apology from the next generation? More
PHARMACEUTICS
Making Patient Responsibility More than Skin Deep
BY ALYSSA SCLAFANI
Accutane is a godsend for some people. What’s the best way of preventing the birth defects? More
Previous Commentary

Older commentary is available by date, author, or subject.

On The Web

The Luxurious Growth
David Brooks, NY Times
“There seems to be a general feeling, as a Hastings Center working group put it, that ‘behavioral genetics will never explain as much of human behavior as was once promised.’”

Mind-Altering Drugs and the Problem Child
Claudia Meininger Gold, Boston Globe
“If we can listen differently to parents of young children who have ‘behavior problems,’ we can intervene early, before there is even a question of medication, and may be able to change these developing brains.”

Cash for Kidneys? Scheme Won't Work
Art Caplan, MSNBC
“A default donation plan could bring a boost in organs for transplant without creating the headaches, fears and misdistribution of a financial market.”

'Blade Runner' ruling subverts nature of sport
Art Caplan, MSNBC
“It may be fascinating to see who can go the fastest on rocket-powered legs or throw a heavy weight the farthest using performance-enhancing drugs, or genetically engineered muscles. But what you have then is an exhibition or a show, not a sport.”

A Phony 'War on Science'
Michael Gerson, Washington Post
“In their talk of a Republican war on science, liberals may be blinding themselves to a very different kind of modern war in which their own ideals are deeply implicated: a war on equality.”

It’s Not Immoral to Want to be Immortal
Arthur Caplan, MSNBC
“Despite a lot of hand-wringing and finger-pointing, it is not obvious that wanting to live a lot longer is evil or immoral.”

Science Is Leading Us to More Answers, but It's Also Misleading Us
David A. Shaywitz, Washington Post
“Consumers of scientific information must balance the hope we place in global biology with the skepticism this field has surely earned.”

Taking the Scary out of Breast Cancer Stats
Carol Tavris and Avrum Bluming, LA Times
“The media understand how deeply women fear breast cancer, and the result is that every study that seems to find a link between some new risk factor and the disease makes headlines everywhere.”

Dollars to Doughnuts Diagnosis
Albert Fuchs, LA Times
“Insurance doesn't make routine care affordable; it makes it more expensive by adding a middleman.”

Tainted Medicine
Jerome P. Kassirer, LA Times
“Disclosure of financial ties may give a scientist or researcher a clean conscience, but that doesn't erase the possibility of a conflict.”

Children's health can't be left to faith alone
Arthur Caplan, MSNBC
“Parents do not have the right to watch a child wither away while they pray.”

Transplant List Numbers Raise Doubts
Arthur Caplan, MSNBC
“The American people have a right to expect absolute honesty about the number of people waiting for a transplant at any time.”

An Epidemic No One Wants to Talk About
Robert E. Fullilove et al., Washington Post
“Simply put, we will never rid the United States of HIV and other STDs if our only weapon is medical treatment.”

Making Cells Like Computers
Erik Parens, Boston Globe
“Conceivably, we are on the verge of installing synthetic genomes in bacterial cells to create products we want. But we are still a long, long way from doing what most people mean by ‘synthesizing life.’”

Miracle Workers?
David Rieff, New York Times Magazine
“Even today, the oldest of all relations between patient and physician — that of supplicant to shaman — continues to exert its authority.”

Overselling Overmedication
Judith Warner, NYTimes.com
“Most of the critics decrying the over-medicalization of the American mind rest their arguments upon the bedrock assumption that people who have nothing wrong with them are being medicated for largely fictitious concerns.”

Ads Spur Urge for Drugs
David Lazarus, LA Times
“DTC advertising has turned prescription drugs into just another gotta-have-it consumer product.”

Contact Us | Privacy | Terms Of Use 

© The Hastings Center 2008