Publications by authors named "N P Emmerich"

Article Synopsis
  • Progress has been made in legalizing abortion in Australia, but ongoing issues in service provision pose serious (bio)ethical concerns that need to be addressed.
  • Healthcare professionals can opt-out of providing services based on ethical beliefs, but non-provision without a clear rationale undermines medical professionalism and patient care.
  • The essay argues for a collective reassessment of abortion services by healthcare professionals, emphasizing the need for comprehensive delivery and critical analysis in bioethics to meet the needs of women's reproductive healthcare.
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Like other elite athletes, ballet dancers are highly dedicated to the pursuit of their vocation. They work to perfect their bodies, their movements and their expression of the art form. The lockdowns that occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic represented a significant interruption to the extraordinary but everyday lives of ballet dancers, creating unique environments where exploration of the embodied habitus of ballet can be further investigated.

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Recent research offers good reason to think that various psychedelic drugs-including psilocybin, ayahuasca, ketamine, MDMA, and LSD-may have significant therapeutic potential in the treatment of various mental health conditions, including post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, existential distress, and addiction. Although the use of psychoactive drugs, such as Diazepam or Ritalin, is well established, psychedelics arguably represent a therapeutic step change. As therapies, their value would seem to lie in the subjective experiences they induce.

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In , Hardman and Hutchinson make some interesting and compelling points about the way in which 'the ethical'-various values and various kinds of values-are embedded in everyday life, including the everyday life one finds in clinical interactions, understood as scientific or scientifically informed activities. However, even when one considers 'the ethical' from within the horizon of understanding adopted in their essay, they neglect several important features of healthcare and medical education. In this rejoinder, I argue that a fuller understanding would go some way to indicating the complexity of ethics and 'ethical action' in the clinic, as well as the nature of and need for 'expert' analysis and philosophical reflection on the ethical questions that modern healthcare continues to engender.

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