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2.
J Gen Intern Med ; 39(6): 1048-1052, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38169026

ABSTRACT

Medical students (NSB, NM, JDW) spearheaded revision of the policy and clinical practice for shackling incarcerated patients at Boston Medical Center (BMC), the largest safety net hospital in New England. In American hospitals, routine shackling of incarcerated patients with metal restraints is widespread-except for perinatal patients-regardless of consciousness, mobility, illness severity, or age. The modified policy includes individualized assessments and allows incarcerated patients to be unshackled if they meet defined criteria. The students also formed the Stop Shackling Patients Coalition (SSP Coalition) of clinicians, public health practitioners, human rights advocates, and community members determined to humanize the inpatient treatment of incarcerated patients. Changes pioneered at BMC led the Mass General Brigham health system to follow suit. The Massachusetts Medical Society adopted a resolution authored by the SSP Coalition, which condemned universal shackling and advocated for use of the least restrictive alternative. This will be presented to the American Medical Association in June 2024. The Coalition led a similar effort to coauthor a policy statement on the issue, which was formally adopted by the American Public Health Association in November 2023. Most importantly, in an unprecedented human rights victory, a BMC patient who was incarcerated, sedated, and intubated was unshackled by correctional officers for the purpose of preserving human dignity.


Subject(s)
Human Rights , Humans , Restraint, Physical , Boston
3.
J Law Med Ethics ; 51(3): 480-484, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38088615

ABSTRACT

Abortion stories have always played a powerful role in advancing women's rights. In the abortion sphere particularly, the personal is political. Following the Court's reversal of Roe v. Wade, abortion politics, and abortion storytelling, take on an even deeper political role in challenging the bloodless judicial language of Dobbs with the lived experience of women.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Induced , Abortion, Legal , Pregnancy , Female , Humans , United States , Women's Rights , Supreme Court Decisions
6.
J Forensic Sci ; 67(1): 275-278, 2022 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34817076

ABSTRACT

On March 12, 2018, John Laubscher, owner of AJ's Archery in Nelson, NY, had a gut feeling and refused to sell a rifle to a Syracuse University student-disrupting a mass shooting (https://www.syracuse.com/crime/2018/04/how_gun_shop_owner_thwarted_on_the_edge_su_student_from_buying_high-capacity_rif.html. Accessed 10 Nov 2021). Prompted by this, we surveyed the opinions, beliefs, attitudes, and current practices of gun sellers in Onondaga County, NY, in regard to safe gun sales. The primary outcome was to determine which types of "concerning behaviors" are more likely to cause a seller to intervene in some manner. Secondary outcomes included the following: ascertaining the frequency of denials of customer purchases, frequency of reporting to law enforcement, and identifying any gaps that make it difficult for gun sellers to report behaviors to the authorities. Follow-up interviews were conducted with those who were willing to speak with the authors in more depth. A response rate of 12.9% was achieved. Sixty-two percent (62.5%) of respondents had some experience in uniformed services, with specialized training in mental or emotional crises, as well as deception detection. The majority found the training helpful in their gun selling career. Reasons for personal denials were reported as: "interest in illegal fittings," "information revealed during conversation," and "lack of basic knowledge of using the firearm looking to purchase." Two respondents stated that due to a lack of a "reporting protocol," they would not report any concerns to law enforcement. The study helps inform future research in regard to surveying more sellers across NY state and nationwide.


Subject(s)
Firearms , Homicide , Attitude , Commerce , Humans , Law Enforcement , Surveys and Questionnaires
7.
Am J Law Med ; 48(2-3): 173-186, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36715259

ABSTRACT

In this Article, I explore how nearly continuous public rhetorical challenges to abortion in the political realm first led the public and the courts to turn away from a particular abortion procedure (intact dilation and extraction, also known as partial-birth abortion) which political agitators labeled as "barbaric" and then to view physicians who performed abortions not as legitimate professionals, but simply as "abortionists," and sometimes as evil "Frankensteins." "Abortionists" use no "medical judgment" and are unworthy of deference by state legislatures, Congress, or the courts when deciding how or when to perform an abortion. The concentration on the welfare of fetuses and the actions of physicians permitted the abortion debate to bypass discussion of both the rights and welfare of pregnant patients, including their right to health, and to virtually never mention that abortion restrictions primarily affect people in poverty who cannot afford to seek reproductive health care, including an abortion, by traveling to a nonrestrictive state. Understanding the power of extreme rhetoric, including the use of social media in political campaigns and the use and misuse of concrete terms such as murder, infanticide, brutality, and dismemberment, and abstract concepts such as "human dignity," can help us plot a post-Dobbs way forward. Perhaps the demise of Roe can lead to a birth of a new rhetoric on abortion, one that concentrates on the right to health of everyone, including the right to make reproductive decisions, and requires moving abortion back into the realm of contemporary medicine, complete with a meaningful doctor-patient relationship protected by privacy and financed in a way that is accessible to all pregnant patients.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Induced , Physicians , Pregnancy , Female , United States , Humans , Trust , Respect , Physician-Patient Relations , Abortion, Legal
9.
J Law Med Ethics ; 49(1): 59-63, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33966656

ABSTRACT

As healthcare providers engage in the politics of reforming and humanizing our immigration and asylum "system" it is critical that they are able to refer their patients whose health is directly impacted by our immigration laws and policies to experts who can help them navigate the system and obtain the healthcare they need.


Subject(s)
Advisory Committees , Emigration and Immigration/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Services Needs and Demand , Public Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Refugees/legislation & jurisprudence , Undocumented Immigrants/legislation & jurisprudence , Boston , Humans , Safety-net Providers
10.
11.
CRISPR J ; 4(1): 19-24, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33571044

ABSTRACT

Gene drives hold promise for use in controlling insect vectors of diseases, agricultural pests, and for conservation of ecosystems against invasive species. At the same time, this technology comes with potential risks that include unknown downstream effects on entire ecosystems as well as the accidental or nefarious spread of organisms that carry the gene drive machinery. A code of ethics can be a useful tool for all parties involved in the development and regulation of gene drives and can be used to help ensure that a balanced analysis of risks, benefits, and values is taken into consideration in the interest of society and humanity. We have developed a code of ethics for gene drive research with the hope that this code will encourage the development of an international framework that includes ethical guidance of gene drive research and is incorporated into scientific practice by gaining broad agreement and adherence.


Subject(s)
Codes of Ethics , Gene Drive Technology , Ecosystem , Gene Editing , Humans , Introduced Species , Morals , Public Health
15.
Am J Law Med ; 46(2-3): 143-165, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32659189

ABSTRACT

The moon landing, now more than a half century in the past, has turned out to be the culmination of human space travel, rather than its beginning. Genetic engineering, especially applications of CRISPR, now presents the most publicly-discussed engineering challenges-and not just technical, but ethical as well. In this article, I will use the two most controversial genomic engineering applications to help identify the ethics and human rights implications of these research projects. Each of these techniques directly modifies the mechanisms of evolution, threatens to alter our views of ourselves as humans and our planet as our home, and presents novel informed consent and dual use challenges: human genome editing and gene drives in insects.I begin with a discussion of so far disastrously unsuccessful attempts to regulate germline editing in humans, including a summary of the first application of germline genome editing in humans and its aftermath. I then turn to a discussion of setting ethical standards for a genomic technology that has not yet been deployed in nature-gene drives. Finally, I end by suggesting that human rights can and should be directly applicable to defining the ethics of genomic research.


Subject(s)
Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats , Consent Forms/standards , Ethics, Research , Gene Drive Technology/ethics , Gene Editing/ethics , Germ Cells , Animals , Codes of Ethics , Culicidae/genetics , Female , Gene Editing/methods , Human Rights , Humans , Male , Professional Misconduct
16.
Hastings Cent Rep ; 50(3): 23-24, 2020 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32596907

ABSTRACT

This piece offers a retrospective review of a plenary speech at the 1969 Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association by the leading environmentalist of the Nixon administration, attorney and judge Russell Train. Train's talk, titled "Prescription for a Planet," can be seen as an early argument for uniting environmental health and public health as the two main determinants of both individual and population health and for the inclusion of these fields in the then-new field of "bioethics."


Subject(s)
Environmental Health/ethics , Environmental Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Health , History, 20th Century , Retrospective Studies , United States
18.
Trends Biotechnol ; 38(4): 351-354, 2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32014274

ABSTRACT

As public interest advocates, policy experts, bioethicists, and scientists, we call for a course correction in public discussions about heritable human genome editing. Clarifying misrepresentations, centering societal consequences and concerns, and fostering public empowerment will support robust, global public engagement and meaningful deliberation about altering the genes of future generations.


Subject(s)
Gene Editing/ethics , Genome, Human/genetics , Bioethical Issues , Embryo, Mammalian , Germ Cells , Humans
20.
Biodes Res ; 2020: 1016207, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37849905

ABSTRACT

The long atmospheric residence time of CO2 creates an urgent need to add atmospheric carbon drawdown to CO2 regulatory strategies. Synthetic and systems biology (SSB), which enables manipulation of cellular phenotypes, offers a powerful approach to amplifying and adding new possibilities to current land management practices aimed at reducing atmospheric carbon. The participants (in attendance: Christina Agapakis, George Annas, Adam Arkin, George Church, Robert Cook-Deegan, Charles DeLisi, Dan Drell, Sheldon Glashow, Steve Hamburg, Henry Jacoby, Henry Kelly, Mark Kon, Todd Kuiken, Mary Lidstrom, Mike MacCracken, June Medford, Jerry Melillo, Ron Milo, Pilar Ossorio, Ari Patrinos, Keith Paustian, Kristala Jones Prather, Kent Redford, David Resnik, John Reilly, Richard J. Roberts, Daniel Segre, Susan Solomon, Elizabeth Strychalski, Chris Voigt, Dominic Woolf, Stan Wullschleger, and Xiaohan Yang) identified a range of possibilities by which SSB might help reduce greenhouse gas concentrations and which might also contribute to environmental sustainability and adaptation. These include, among other possibilities, engineering plants to convert CO2 produced by respiration into a stable carbonate, designing plants with an increased root-to-shoot ratio, and creating plants with the ability to self-fertilize. A number of serious ecological and societal challenges must, however, be confronted and resolved before any such application can be fully assessed, realized, and deployed.

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