3 results match your criteria: "Alden March Bioethics Institute-Albany Medical College[Affiliation]"
Monash Bioeth Rev
December 2022
Alden March Bioethics Institute Albany Medical College, 47 New Scotland Avenue-MC 153, 12208, Albany, NY, USA.
How far can smart machines, or carebots, go in performing the profoundly intimate human work of patient caregivers? How will mechanization alter how we understand the essential features of the human task of caregiving and the role of the caregiver? It is these complex questions, with real world implications, that this article discusses in reviewing "Caregiving, Carebots, and Contagion" by philosopher and bioethicist Michael Brannagan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Law Biosci
June 2020
Alden March Bioethics Institute Albany Medical College 47 New Scotland Ave, MC 153, Albany, NY 12208.
In this paper, I argue that the principle of respect for autonomy can serve as the basis for laws that significantly limit conduct, including orders mandating isolation and quarantine. This thesis is fundamentally at odds with an overwhelming consensus in contemporary bioethics that the principle of respect for autonomy, while important in everyday clinical encounters, must be 'curtailed', 'constrained', or 'overridden' by other principles in times of crisis. I contend that bioethicists have embraced an indefensibly 'thin' notion of autonomy that uproots the concept from its foundations in Kantian ethics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Ethics
July 2016
Alden March Bioethics Institute-Albany Medical College, 47 New Scotland Ave.-MC153, Albany, New York 12208 USA.
Clinical ethics consultants (CECs) often face some of the most difficult communication and interpersonal challenges that occur in hospitals, involving stressed stakeholders who express, with strong emotions, their preferences and concerns in situations of personal crisis and loss. In this article we will give examples of how much of the important work that ethics consultants perform in addressing clinical ethics conflicts is incompletely conceived and explained in the American Society of Bioethics and Humanities Core Competencies for Healthcare Ethics Consultation and the clinical ethics literature. The work to which we refer is best conceptualized as a specialized type of interviewing, in which the emotional barriers of patients and their families or surrogates can be identified and addressed in light of relevant ethical obligations and values within the context of ethics facilitation.
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