489 results match your criteria: "Institute for Ethics[Affiliation]"
Res Integr Peer Rev
November 2023
iEH2-Institute for Ethics History Humanities, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Background: Studies on academic integrity reveal high rates of plagiarism and cheating among students. We have developed an online teaching tool, Integrity Games ( https://integgame.eu/ ), that uses serious games to teach academic integrity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioethics
March 2024
Institute for Ethics, History and Philosophy of Medicine, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany.
The concept of "translational bioethics" has received considerable attention in recent years. Most publications draw an analogy to translational medicine and describe bioethical research that aims at implementing and evaluating ethical interventions. However, current accounts of translational bioethics are often rather vague and seem to differ with regard to conceptual and methodological assumptions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroorganisms
October 2023
Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27516, USA.
The role of the environment in the emergence and spread of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is being increasingly recognized, raising questions about the public health risks associated with environmental AMR. Yet, little is known about pathogenicity among resistant bacteria in environmental systems. Existing studies on the association between AMR and virulence are contradictory, as fitness costs and genetic co-occurrence can be opposing influences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Ethics
January 2024
Institute for Ethics, History and Philosophy of Medicine, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, Hannover, Germany
This essay discusses the ethical challenges and dilemmas in allocating scarce medical resources during the COVID-19 pandemic, using the German legislative process as a starting point. It is guided by the right to non-discrimination of people with disability and generally contrasts utilitarian and rights-based principles of allocation. Three approaches that were suggested in the German discussion, are presented, the lottery principle, the first come first served principle and the probability to survive principle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSyst Rev
November 2023
Institute for Ethics, History and Philosophy of Medicine, Hannover Medical School, Carl-Neuberg-Str. 1, 30625, Hannover, Germany.
PLoS Med
October 2023
QUEST Center for Responsible Research, Berlin Institute of Health at Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Background: Clinical trial registries allow assessment of deviations of published trials from their protocol, which may indicate a considerable risk of bias. However, since entries in many registries can be updated at any time, deviations may go unnoticed. We aimed to assess the frequency of changes to primary outcomes in different historical versions of registry entries, and how often they would go unnoticed if only deviations between published trial reports and the most recent registry entry are assessed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med Inform Decis Mak
October 2023
Institute of Genetic Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine and Medical Center - University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Background: Chronic kidney disease (CKD), a major public health problem with differing disease etiologies, leads to complications, comorbidities, polypharmacy, and mortality. Monitoring disease progression and personalized treatment efforts are crucial for long-term patient outcomes. Physicians need to integrate different data levels, e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Ethics
May 2024
Institute for Ethics, History and Philosophy of Medicine, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, Hannover, Niedersachsen, Germany
The medical profession is observing a rising number of calls to action considering the threat that climate change poses to global human health. Theory-led bioethical analyses of the scope and weight of physicians' normative duty towards climate protection and its conflict with individual patient care are currently scarce. This article offers an analysis of the normative issues at stake by using Korsgaard's neo-Kantian moral account of practical identities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Adv Nurs
March 2024
Institute of Palliative Care, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria.
Aims: To discuss the construction and use of vignettes as a novel approach in spiritual care research and education.
Design: Methods paper.
Methods: In this methods paper, the authors introduce the use of vignettes in spiritual care research and provide insight into the construction of vignettes.
Bioethics
July 2024
Faculty of Social Sciences, Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany.
Health innovation is mainly envisioned in direct connection to medical research institutions or pharmaceutical and technology companies. Yet, these types of innovation often do not meet the needs and expectations of individuals affected by health conditions. With the emergence of digital health technologies and social media, we can observe a shift, which involves people living with illness modifying and improving medical and health devices outside of the formal research and development sector, figuring both as users and innovators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Hist
October 2023
Institute for Ethics, History, and the Humanities (iEH2), Centre médical universitaire, University of Geneva, 1 rue Michel Servet, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland.
During the interwar period, France put unprecedented efforts into public health measures targeting the colonised populations of sub-Saharan Africa. This investment in health was seen as crucial to ensuring the renewal of the African labour force needed for the economic development of the colonies. Syphilis, although less deadly than other endemic or epidemic diseases such as yellow fever, sleeping sickness and bubonic plague, was one of the most widespread infections in France's sub-Saharan colonies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Legal Med
January 2024
Division of Pediatric Pulmonology, Allergology and Endocrinology, Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Medical University Vienna, 1090, Vienna, Austria.
Background And Objective: To improve the currently low conviction rate in cases of child abuse a forensic examination center for children and adolescents (FOKUS) was established in Vienna, Austria. Besides a state of the art treatment combined with forensic documentation, one of FOKUS' key goals is to identify potential areas for improvements within the process legal proceedings in cases of child abuse through constant scientific monitoring. The accompanying study at hand includes all patients referred to FOKUS within a two year timeframe (n = 233), monitoring their progression from first contact with the medical professionals from FOKUS to the end of criminal proceedings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Public Health
October 2023
Ludwig Boltzmann Institute Digital Health and Patient Safety, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Digital health technologies have been in use for many years in a wide spectrum of healthcare scenarios. This narrative review outlines the current use and the future strategies and significance of digital health technologies in modern healthcare applications. It covers the current state of the scientific field (delineating major strengths, limitations, and applications) and envisions the future impact of relevant emerging key technologies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Equity
September 2023
Kenan Institute for Ethics, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Purpose: Restorative Justice (RJ) as a practice and mindset is growing within academic medicine and health care. The authors aim to categorize the extent to which RJ training and practices have been researched, explored, and applied within health care, medicine, and academic contexts.
Methods: In July 2021, the authors conducted a scoping literature review, searching four databases for peer-reviewed articles and book chapters discussing RJ.
Syst Rev
September 2023
Institute for Ethics, History and Philosophy of Medicine, Hannover Medical School, Carl-Neuberg-Str. 1, 30625, Hannover, Germany.
Background: Systematic reviews of ethical literature (SREL) aim at providing an overview of ethical issues, arguments, or concepts on a specific ethical topic. As SREL are becoming more common, their methodology and possible impact are increasingly subjected to critical considerations. Because they analyse and synthetise normative literature, SREL are likely to be used differently than typical systematic reviews.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnaesthesiologie
December 2023
Working Group for Health Care Operations/Health Information Management, Faculty of Business and Economics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Augsburg, Universitätsstr. 16, 86159, Augsburg, Germany.
The significant increase in patients during the COVID-19 pandemic presented the healthcare system with a variety of challenges. The intensive care unit is one of the areas particularly affected in this context. Only through extensive infection control measures as well as an enormous logistical effort was it possible to treat all patients requiring intensive care in Germany even during peak phases of the pandemic, and to prevent triage even in regions with high patient pressure and simultaneously low capacities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Relig Health
February 2024
Palliative Medicine Research, The University of Notre Dame Australia, Broadway, NSW, 2007, Australia.
It is reported that little spiritual care communication skills training occurs in Australian medical schools. This survey explored the experience of final year students in this domain in order to inform the construction of a new curriculum. Medical students in their final year at four Australian medical schools were invited to participate in an online survey, which included questions about demographic details, exposure to spiritual history taking, perceived learning needs, and the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Spiritual Well-being 12 item Non-Illness score.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Pharmacol Ther
December 2023
Institute for Ethics, History, and Philosophy of Medicine, Hannover Medical School (MHH), Hannover, Germany.
Human challenge studies (HCS) are controlled clinical trials in which participants are deliberately infected with a pathogen. Such trials are being developed for an increasing number of diseases. Partly as a result of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, there has been a recent ethical debate about the reasons for and against HCS in general, or rather, about the requirements that individual HCS must fulfill to be ethically acceptable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
September 2023
iEH2-Institute for Ethics History Humanities, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
The recent replicability crisis in social and biomedical sciences has highlighted the need for improvement in the honest transmission of scientific content. We present the results of two studies investigating whether nudges and soft social incentives enhance participants' readiness to transmit high-quality scientific news. In two online randomized experiments (Total N = 2425), participants had to imagine that they were science journalists who had to select scientific studies to report in their next article.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed
December 2023
Department of Neonatology, University Children's Hospital Tübingen, Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.
Objective: The ALBINO Trial (NCT03162653) investigates effects of very early postnatal allopurinol on neurocognitive outcome following perinatal asphyxia where prenatal informed consent (IC) is impossible. Ethically and legally, waiver of consent and/or deferred consent (DC) is acceptable in such an emergency. Short oral/two-step consent (SOC, brief information and oral consent followed by IC) has recently been investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTheor Med Bioeth
December 2023
Department for Medical Ethics and History of Medicine, Goettingen University Medical Center, Goettingen, Germany.
It can be assumed that value judgements, which are needed to judge what is 'good' or 'better' and what is 'bad' or 'worse', are involved in every decision-making process. The theoretical understanding and analysis of value judgements is, therefore, important in the context of bioethics, for example, to be able to ethically assess real decision-making processes in biomedical practice and make recommendations for improvements. However, real decision-making processes and the value judgements inherent in them must first be investigated empirically ('empirical bioethics').
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWien Klin Wochenschr
September 2023
UMIT TIROL-University for Health Sciences and Technology, Hall in Tirol, Austria.
Front Med (Lausanne)
July 2023
Ludwig Boltzmann Institute Digital Health and Patient Safety, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Objectives: Continuous non-invasive monitoring of blood pressure is one of the main factors in ensuring the safety of the patient's condition in anesthesiology, intensive care, surgery, and other areas of medicine. The purpose of this work was to analyze the current patent situation and identify directions and trends in the application of non-invasive medical sensors for continuous blood pressure monitoring, with a focus on clinical experience in critical care and validation thereof.
Materials And Methods: The research results reflect data collected up to September 30, 2022.