Bioethics

PHIL 3345. Supporting the philosophical study of bioethics, bio-medical ethics, biotechnology, and the future of life, at Middle Tennessee State University and beyond... "Keep your health, your splendid health. It is better than all the truths under the firmament." William James

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Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Exam #2 Study Guide

Quiz March 29, OI 77-109

1. What was ambiguous about the vampire metaphor, for Biss?

2. What struck Biss as both magical and mundane?

3. Smallpox is now no longer a disease, but a what?

4. Who were the Polio Pioneers? Where is polio still endemic, and why?

5. What are the profound differences between ethyl and methyl mercury?

6. How did Andrew Wakefield cause a "cascade of panic"?

7. Who accused WHO of collusion in 2009?

8. Why does Susan Sontag say public health is difficult to promote in our society?

9. Why does Arthur Caplan say the marketplace model of healthcare is dangerous?

10. When would Biss consider surgery a conservative option?

11. For what is there no credible evidence, "Dr. Bob" notwithstanding?

12. What's Biss's Dad's argument for preventive medicine?

March 27, OI 40-76

1. "Natural" has popularly come to mean what, in the context of medicine?

2. The most unnatural aspect of vaccination is what?

3. What led to the creation of the EPA?

4. What kind of thinking makes no room for ambiguous identities, and what does it threaten?

5. What "troubling dualisms" characterize the vaccination debate?

6. What practice went on in China and India for hundreds of years, to combat smallpox?

7. What metaphor is implied by "inoculation"?

8. What disappointed Biss about the immuno-semiotics conference?

9. What game metaphor does Biss prefer, to describe our immune systems and viral pathogens?

10. What caused the fatal form of croup that has virtually disappeared in this country since the '30s?

11. What caused the spread of puerpal sepsis ("childbed fever")?

12. What would exceed federal food-safety levels for DDT and PCBs at the grocery store, if sold there?

March 20, Brave New World

1.     Define medicalization.

2.     What is social iatrogenesis?

3.     What is a practical example of social iatrogenesis?

4.     Peter Conrad has proposed to consider medicalization in what three respects?

5.     What are the engines of medicalization?

6.     (T/F) The use of pharmaceuticals and medicalization are the same thing.

7.     What aspects of medicalization are not directly connected to the use of drugs?

8.     (T/F)  There are situations of medicalization which do not include the consumption of pharmaceuticals as their main feature.

9.     What situations of medicalization do not include the consumption of pharmaceuticals as their main feature?

10.  Define pharmaceuticalization

11.  Give an example of pharmaceuticalization

12.  What three main causes are proposed to have fostered pharmaceuticalization?

13.  (T/F) Causes of mental illness are often described as etiology unknown.

14.  What are the main consequences of the latest version of the DSM?

15.  Define risks.

16.  Define dangers.

17.  As related to health, risk may be connected to what?

18.  (T/F) It can be easier for political institutions to embrace a clinical and biological definition of a disease instead of addressing the social causes underlying these pathological conditions.

19.  What is lacking in the risk factor model?

20.  Define human enhancement.

March 22, OI 3-39.

1. The stories of Achilles and the dragon imply what about immunity?

2. "A valuable asset placed in the care of someone to whom it does not ultimately belong" is Biss's definition of what? OR, it captures her understanding of what?

3. Our vaccines are now sterile, so anti-vaccine activists' greatest fear is not of bacterial but ____ contamination.

4. What is Dracula about, besides vampires?

5. Who said love is known "by its fruits"?

6. Contributions to the "banking of immunity" give rise to the principle of ____ immunity.

7. What's the most common way that infants contract hep B?

8. What raises the probability that undervaccinated children will contract a disease?

9. Who or what were microbiologist Graham Rook's "old friends"?

10. "There is never enough evidence to prove that an event _____ happen? (can/can't)



March 15, Medical Paternalism

1. What is “autonomy” drawn from vs. “paternalism” being drawn from the role of the father?

2. According to Childress what makes paternalism morally interesting?

3. In what cases should a physician override one person's autonomy?

4.What does Dworkin call liberty in contradiction to liberty as license?

5. what are the two factors of justification often given for paternalistic interventions?

6.What two matters does the duty to respect autonomy involve?

7. What could a policy that affirms “you should care for yourself” be interpreted as?

March 1, Origin 

1. What is evolution?

2. What is entropy?

3. What is the proposed Seventh Kingdom?

4. What happens to humans and technology, according to Edmond Kirsch?

5. What is the price of greatness?

6. Are humans in a symbiotic relationship with technology already?



Posted by Kate Edwards at 3:45 PM 4 comments:
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Rachel Carson


Perhaps the finest nature writer of the Twentieth Century, Rachel Carson (1907-1964) is remembered more today as the woman who challenged the notion that humans could obtain mastery over nature by chemicals, bombs and space travel than for her studies of ocean life. Her sensational book Silent Spring (1962) warned of the dangers to all natural systems from the misuse of chemical pesticides such as DDT, and questioned the scope and direction of modern science, initiated the contemporary environmental movement.

Carson was a student of nature, a born ecologist before that science was defined, and a writer who found that the natural world gave her something to write about. Born in Springdale, Pennsylvania, upstream from the industrial behemoth of Pittsburgh, she became a marine scientist working for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Washington, DC, primarily as a writer and editor. She was always aware of the impact that humans had on the natural world. Her first book, Under the Sea-Wind (1941) was a gripping account of the interactions of a sea bird, a fish and an eel -- who shared life in the open seas. A canny scholar working in government during World War II, Carson took advantage of the latest scientific material for her next book, The Sea Around Us (1951) which was nothing short of a biography of the sea. It became an international best-seller, raised the consciousness of a generation, and made Rachel Carson the trusted public voice of science in America. The Edge of the Sea (1955) brought Carson’s focus on the ecosystems of the eastern coast from Maine to Florida. All three books were physical explanations of life, all drenched with miracle of what happens to life in and near the sea.

In her books on the sea Carson wrote about geologic discoveries from submarine technology and underwater research -- of how islands were formed, how currents change and merge, how temperature affects sea life, and how erosion impacts not just shore lines but salinity, fish populations, and tiny micro-organisms. Even in the 1950's, Carson’s ecological vision of the oceans shows her embrace of a larger environmental ethic which could lead to the sustainability of nature’s interactive and interdependent systems. Climate change, rising sea-levels, melting Arctic glaciers, collapsing bird and animal populations, crumbling geological faults -- all are part of Carson’s work. But how, she wondered, would the educated public be kept informed of these challenges to life itself? What was the public's "right to know"?

Evidence of the widespread misuse of organic chemical pesticides government and industry after World War II prompted Carson to reluctantly speak out not just about the immediate threat to humans and non-human nature from unwitting chemical exposure, but also to question government and private science's assumption that human domination of nature was the correct course for the future. In Silent Spring Carson asked the hard questions about whether and why humans had the right to control nature; to decide who lives or dies, to poison or to destroy non-human life. In showing that all biological systems were dynamic and by urging the public to question authority, to ask "who speaks, and why"? Rachel Carson became a social revolutionary, and Silent Spring became the handbook for the future of all life on Earth.

http://www.rachelcarson.org/
Posted by Phil at 6:53 AM No comments:
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Why ‘Natural’ Doesn’t Mean Anything Anymore

By MICHAEL POLLAN

It isn’t every day that the definition of a common English word that is ubiquitous in common parlance is challenged in federal court, but that is precisely what has happened with the word “natural.” During the past few years, some 200 class-action suits have been filed against food manufacturers, charging them with misuse of the adjective in marketing such edible oxymorons as “natural” Cheetos Puffs, “all-natural” Sun Chips, “all-natural” Naked Juice, “100 percent all-natural” Tyson chicken nuggets and so forth. The plaintiffs argue that many of these products contain ingredients — high-fructose corn syrup, artificial flavors and colorings, chemical preservatives and genetically modified organisms — that the typical consumer wouldn’t think of as “natural.”

Judges hearing these cases — many of them in the Northern District of California — have sought a standard definition of the adjective that they could cite to adjudicate these claims, only to discover that no such thing exists.

Something in the human mind, or heart, seems to need a word of praise for all that humanity hasn’t contaminated, and for us that word now is “natural.” Such an ideal can be put to all sorts of rhetorical uses. Among the antivaccination crowd, for example, it’s not uncommon to read about the superiority of something called “natural immunity,” brought about by exposure to the pathogen in question rather than to the deactivated (and therefore harmless) version of it made by humans in laboratories. “When you inject a vaccine into the body,” reads a post on an antivaxxer website, Campaign for Truth in Medicine, “you’re actually performing an unnatural act.” This, of course, is the very same term once used to decry homosexuality and, more recently, same-sex marriage, which the Family Research Council has taken to comparing unfavorably to what it calls “natural marriage.”

So what are we really talking about when we talk about natural? It depends; the adjective is impressively slippery, its use steeped in dubious assumptions that are easy to overlook. Perhaps the most incoherent of these is the notion that nature consists of everything in the world except us and all that we have done or made. In our heart of hearts, it seems, we are all creationists.

In the case of “natural immunity,” the modifier implies the absence of human intervention, allowing for a process to unfold as it would if we did nothing, as in “letting nature take its course.” In fact, most of medicine sets itself against nature’s course, which is precisely what we like about it — at least when it’s saving us from dying, an eventuality that is perhaps more natural than it is desirable.Continue reading the main story


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RECENT COMMENTS

Michael Bain May 4, 2015

It’s good that people are actually thinking about "Natural", about Nature. A natural state on our planet, to my mind, is one without human...
Petey Tonei May 4, 2015

The material world is intertwined with the conscious world. On this earth, where life exists, we are interdependent, interconnected. Human...
Mor May 4, 2015

A great article. I confound all my friends by being a vegetarian (at least when I am in the States) and yet being in favor of GMOS, genetic...




Yet sometimes medicine’s interventions are unwelcome or go overboard, and nature’s way of doing things can serve as a useful corrective. This seems to be especially true at the beginning and end of life, where we’ve seen a backlash against humanity’s technological ingenuity that has given us both “natural childbirth” and, more recently, “natural death.”

This last phrase, which I expect will soon be on many doctors’ lips, indicates the enduring power of the adjective to improve just about anything you attach it to, from cereal bars all the way on up to dying. It seems that getting end-of-life patients and their families to endorse “do not resuscitate” orders has been challenging. To many ears, “D.N.R.” sounds a little too much like throwing Grandpa under the bus. But according to a paper in The Journal of Medical Ethics, when the orders are reworded to say “allow natural death,” patients and family members and even medical professionals are much more likely to give their consent to what amounts to exactly the same protocols.

The word means something a little different when applied to human behavior rather than biology (let alone snack foods). When marriage or certain sexual practices are described as “natural,” the word is being strategically deployed as a synonym for “normal” or “traditional,” neither of which carries nearly as much rhetorical weight. “Normal” is by now too obviously soaked in moral bigotry; by comparison, “natural” seems to float high above human squabbling, offering a kind of secular version of what used to be called divine law. Of course, that’s exactly the role that “natural law” played for America’s founding fathers, who invoked nature rather than God as the granter of rights and the arbiter of right and wrong.

“Traditional” marriage might be a more defensible term, but traditional is a much weaker modifier than natural. Tradition changes over time and from culture to culture, and so commands a fraction of the authority of nature, which we think of as timeless and universal, beyond the reach of messy, contested history.

Implicit here is the idea that nature is a repository of abiding moral and ethical values — and that we can say with confidence exactly what those values are. Philosophers often call this the “naturalistic fallacy”: the idea that whatever is (in nature) is what ought to be (in human behavior). But if nature offers a moral standard by which we can measure ourselves, and a set of values to which we should aspire, exactly what sort of values are they? Are they the brutally competitive values of “nature, red in tooth and claw,” in which every individual is out for him- or herself? Or are they the values of cooperation on display in a beehive or ant colony, where the interests of the community trump those of the individual? Opponents of same-sex marriage can find examples of monogamy in the animal kingdom, and yet to do so they need to look past equally compelling examples of animal polygamy as well as increasing evidence of apparent animal homosexuality. And let’s not overlook the dismaying rates of what looks very much like rape in the animal kingdom, or infanticide, or the apparent sadism of your average house cat.

The American Puritans called nature “God’s Second Book,” and they read it for moral guidance, just as we do today. Yet in the same way we can rummage around in the Bible and find textual support for pretty much whatever we want to do or argue, we can ransack nature to justify just about anything. Like the maddening whiteness of Ahab’s whale, nature is an obligingly blank screen on which we can project what we want to see.

So does this mean that, when it comes to saying what’s natural, anything goes? I don’t think so. In fact, I think there’s some philosophical wisdom we can harvest from, of all places, the Food and Drug Administration. When the federal judges couldn’t find a definition of “natural” to apply to the class-action suits before them, three of them wrote to the F.D.A., ordering the agency to define the word. But the F.D.A. had considered the question several times before, and refused to attempt a definition. The only advice the F.D.A. was willing to offer the jurists is that a food labeled “natural” should have “nothing artificial or synthetic” in it “that would not normally be expected in the food.” The F.D.A. states on its website that “it is difficult to define a food product as ‘natural’ because the food has probably been processed and is no longer the product of the earth,” suggesting that the industry might not want to press the point too hard, lest it discover that nothing it sells is natural.

The F.D.A.’s philosopher-bureaucrats are probably right: At least at the margins, it’s impossible to fix a definition of “natural.” Yet somewhere between those margins there lies a broad expanse of common sense. “Natural” has a fairly sturdy antonym — artificial, or synthetic — and, at least on a scale of relative values, it’s not hard to say which of two things is “more natural” than the other: cane sugar or high-fructose corn syrup? Chicken or chicken nuggets? G.M.O.s or heirloom seeds? The most natural foods in the supermarket seldom bother with the word; any food product that feels compelled to tell you it’s natural in all likelihood is not.

But it is probably unwise to venture beyond the shores of common sense, for it isn’t long before you encounter either Scylla or Charybdis. At one extreme end of the spectrum of possible meanings, there’s nothing butnature. Our species is a result of the same process — natural selection — that created every other species, meaning that we and whatever we do are natural, too. So go ahead and call your nuggets natural: It’s like saying they’re made with matter, or molecules, which is to say, it’s like saying nothing at all.

And yet at the opposite end of the spectrum of meaning, where humanity in some sense stands outside nature — as most of us still unthinkingly believe — what is left of the natural that we haven’t altered in some way? We’re mixed up with all of it now, from the chemical composition of the atmosphere to the genome of every plant or animal in the supermarket to the human body itself, which has long since evolved in response to cultural practices we invented, like agriculture and cooking. Nature, if you believe in human exceptionalism, is over. We probably ought to search elsewhere for our values.
nyt, APRIL 28, 2015
==
Michael Pollan is the John S. and James L. Knight professor of journalism at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author, most recently, of “Cooked: A Natural History of Transformation.”
Posted by Phil at 6:49 AM No comments:
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Monday, March 26, 2018

Julie Yip-Williams (1976-2018)


Julie Yip-Williams, whose candid blog about having Stage IV colon cancer also described a life of struggles that began with being born blind in Vietnam and her ethnic Chinese family’s escape in a rickety fishing boat, died on Monday at her home in Brooklyn. She was 42.

Joshua Williams, her husband, said the cause was metastatic colon cancer.

Ms. Yip-Williams’s richly detailed blog, which she started writing after receiving her diagnosis in 2013, was more than an account of her siege with cancer. It was also a meditation on love and family as well as a message of openness to her young daughters, Mia and Isabelle, about her illness.

Ms. Yip-Williams wrestled with hope, which she cursed as an “illusory sentiment.”

“Cancer crushes hope, leaving a wasteland of grief, depression, despair and a sense of unending futility,” she wrote in 2014, adding: “Hope is a funny thing, though. It seems to have a life and will of its own that I cannot control through the sheer force of my mind. It is irrepressible, its very existence inextricably tied to our very spirit, its flame, no matter how weak, not extinguishable.”

Her blog, with additional material written by Ms. Yip-Williams, is being turned into a memoir by Random House, which expects to publish it later this year or early next year... (continues)
==
CBS Sunday Morning. We want to take a moment now to note the death this past Monday of Julie Yip-Wlliams.
As you may remember, Tracy Smith told Julie's story here on "Sunday Morning"just two weeks ago … a story that was all about living on borrowed time.
Julie was born totally blind in Vietnam, and narrowly escaped a plot hatched by her own grandmother to have her killed on grounds that she had no future.
julia-yip-williams-interview-promo.jpg
Julie Yip-Williams.
 CBS NEWS
But at age three, Julie and her family made it to the United States, where a surgeon was able to give her only partial sight, leaving her still legally blind.
Undaunted, Julie Yip-Williams went on to graduate from Harvard Law School, and pursue a corporate career -- only to be diagnosed with colon cancer five years ago.
Still undaunted, Julie underwent every surgery and treatment and clinical trial she could find, to no avail. 
Through it all, she shared her experience in a candid blog, My Cancer Fighting Journey, while also preparing her daughters -- Isabelle, age six, and Mia, eight -- for the day when her borrowed time would run out.
Julie Yip-Williams was just 42 years old.
Posted by Phil at 10:20 AM No comments:
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Friday, March 23, 2018

Quizzes March 27, 29

March 27, OI 40-76

1. "Natural" has popularly come to mean what, in the context of medicine?

2. The most unnatural aspect of vaccination is what?

3. What led to the creation of the EPA?

4. What kind of thinking makes no room for ambiguous identities, and what does it threaten?

5. What "troubling dualisms" characterize the vaccination debate?

6. What practice went on in China and India for hundreds of years, to combat smallpox?

7. What metaphor is implied by "inoculation"?

8. What disappointed Biss about the immuno-semiotics conference?

9. What game metaphor does Biss prefer, to describe our immune systems and viral pathogens?

10. What caused the fatal form of croup that has virtually disappeared in this country since the '30s?

11. What caused the spread of puerpal sepsis ("childbed fever")?

12. What would exceed federal food-safety levels for DDT and PCBs at the grocery store, if sold there?

DQ
  • Do you agree that the popular appeal of what is deemed more "natural" is a product of our "profound alienation from the natural world"? 
  • Are vaccines unnatural? 
  • Comment: "It is only when disease manifests as illness that we see it as unnatural." 42
  • Should it bother us that Rachel Carson apparently was wrong about DDT being carcinogenic? 44
  • With the apparent gutting of the EPA and other federal regulators now under way, will "the judicious use of chemicals" to fight insect-born diseases etc. still be possible? 45
  • Are you comfortable with the idea of being a cyborg? 49
  • Are you disproportionately afraid of sharks and oblivious to the dangers of bicycles? Does simply acknowledging such misperceptions help you to overcome them?
  •  Is immunity mostly a metaphor? Is it correctly characterized by metaphors of war? Do you agree with the perspective of alt-med practitioners on this point? 57
  • Is parenting, with its attendant decisions impacting the future health of children, more "like time travel" than making health decisions for oneself? What do you make of the Star Trek example? Who in the present anti-vaxx scenario is "heroically return(ing) to the past to die"? 66
  • Why do you think women healers historically were regarded as witches, albeit "good" ones? Are women fully welcome in the ranks of professional medicine today?
  • Are there modern-day equivalents of "heroic" medicine (bleeding etc.)? Does it have a legitimate place in professional practice?
  • Are we overly obsessed with "purity" and with avoiding toxicity? Are we never cleaner than our environment at large?
  • Should human breast milk be commodified? If so, how should it be regulated?
  • Your DQs

Today in Bioethics, Eula Biss plays some more with the vampire theme and her recognition as both a new mother and a patient that "we feed off of each other, we need each other to live," and that the whole mutual dependency framework of our lives is beautifully "aglow with humanity."

One of the troubling and less lovely expressions of humanity is our tendency to panic in the face of unwarranted and unsubstantiated fears. Such was the "cascade of panic" triggered by Andrew Wakefield's discredited study linking the MMR vaccine to autism. "Wealthier countries have the luxury of entertaining fears the rest of the world cannot afford."


Anderson Cooper (vid)... The Vaccine War (Frontline-vid)... Vaccines-Calling the Shots (Nova-vid)

Refusal of immunity "as a form of civil disobedience" is an opportunity of privilege - "a privileged 1% are sheltered from risk while they draw resources from the other 99%." Consider Marin County, for instance... (vid)

The refuseniks who think they're striking a solid blow against inhumane capitalists, especially Big Pharma, are missing a vital point: shared immmunity "is a system in which both the burdens and the benefits are shared across the entire population," hardly standard operating procedure under capitalism. Opting out really looks more like buying in and supporting the status quo, which is to devalue or ignore appeals to ethical principle in favor of (as Susan Sontag said) "the calculus of self-interest and profitability." What an impoverished state of mind and a shrunken state of heart.

And speaking of Dracula, one more time: "medicine sucks the blood out of people in a lot of ways." So maybe Biss's dad was right: "Most problems will get better if left alone." Problems abound, though, if our reason for choosing to leave them alone is an absence of trust in medical practitioners.

Quiz March 29, OI 77-109


1. What was ambiguous about the vampire metaphor, for Biss?

2. What struck Biss as both magical and mundane?

3. Smallpox is now no longer a disease, but a what?

4. Who were the Polio Pioneers? Where is polio still endemic, and why?

5. What are the profound differences between ethyl and methyl mercury?

6. How did Andrew Wakefield cause a "cascade of panic"?

7. Who accused WHO of collusion in 2009?

8. Why does Susan Sontag say public health is difficult to promote in our society?

9. Why does Arthur Caplan say the marketplace model of healthcare is dangerous?

10. When would Biss consider surgery a conservative option?

11. For what is there no credible evidence, "Dr. Bob" notwithstanding?

12. What's Biss's Dad's argument for preventive medicine?

DQ

  • Why is it important to remember that "it's not your blood" that you must depend upon, when you need a transfusion?
  • Is mutual bodily dependence ugly, beautiful, both, neither,... ?
  • If our knowledge gives viral pathogens immortality, how can we effectively regulate them? 83
  • What's the best way to combat "vaccine refusal" in the developing world? Is that different from how we should address it here? What would you say to Biss's Vietnamese friend? 87
  • Are you worried about nefarious "invisible commercial influences" having an outsized influence on public health policy? Are you persuaded of the "power of the core public health ethos"? 95
  • Is refusing immunity a legitimate form of civil disobedience, or a form of elitist self-indulgence?
  • Is "shopping around for a doctor" (see cartoon below) ever appropriate?
  • What do you think of Biss's critique of capitalism and what it is "really taking from us"? 97
  • What do you think of the anesthesiologist's "disgusting" remarks? 102 Were they unethical, inappropriate, or excusable?
  • What do you think of Biss's "Dad's "two sentence textbook"? 103
  • Should a doctor be concerned with conditions in other docs' waiting rooms? How should they express such concern? 108
  • I suggest we brainstorm several other DQs, in small groups during discussion time, and share them with the whole class before leaving today.




Medical Ethics & Me (@medethicsandme)
3/19/17, 12:25 PM
“Having raised humanity above the beastly level of survival struggles, we will now aim to upgrade humans into... fb.me/ETqAhy3e


"I'll go shop around for a doctor."

 









When Evidence Says No, But Doctors Say Yes
Years after research contradicts common practices, patients continue to demand them and doctors continue to deliver. The result is an epidemic of unnecessary and unhelpful treatment.by David Epstein, ProPublica February 22, 2017

First, listen to the story with the happy ending: At 61, the executive was in excellent health. His blood pressure was a bit high, but everything else looked good, and he exercised regularly. Then he had a scare. He went for a brisk post-lunch walk on a cool winter day, and his chest began to hurt. Back inside his office, he sat down, and the pain disappeared as quickly as it had come.

That night, he thought more about it: middle-aged man, high blood pressure, stressful job, chest discomfort. The next day, he went to a local emergency department. Doctors determined that the man had not suffered a heart attack and that the electrical activity of his heart was completely normal. All signs suggested that the executive had stable angina — chest pain that occurs when the heart muscle is getting less blood-borne oxygen than it needs, often because an artery is partially blocked.

A cardiologist recommended that the man immediately have a coronary angiogram, in which a catheter is threaded into an artery to the heart and injects a dye that then shows up on special x-rays that look for blockages. If the test found a blockage, the cardiologist advised, the executive should get a stent, a metal tube that slips into the artery and forces it open.

While he was waiting in the emergency department, the executive took out his phone and searched “treatment of coronary artery disease.” He immediately found information from medical journals that said medications, like aspirin and blood-pressure-lowering drugs, should be the first line of treatment. The man was an unusually self-possessed patient, so he asked the cardiologist about what he had found. The cardiologist was dismissive and told the man to “do more research.” Unsatisfied, the man declined to have the angiogram and consulted his primary-care doctor.

The primary-care physician suggested a different kind of angiogram, one that did not require a catheter but instead used multiple x-rays to image arteries. That test revealed an artery that was partially blocked by plaque, and though the man’s heart was pumping blood normally, the test was incapable of determining whether the blockage was dangerous. Still, his primary-care doctor, like the cardiologist at the emergency room, suggested that the executive have an angiogram with a catheter, likely followed by a procedure to implant a stent. The man set up an appointment with the cardiologist he was referred to for the catheterization, but when he tried to contact that doctor directly ahead of time, he was told the doctor wouldn’t be available prior to the procedure. And so the executive sought yet another opinion. That’s when he found Dr. David L. Brown, a professor in the cardiovascular division of the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. The executive told Brown that he’d felt pressured by the previous doctors and wanted more information. He was willing to try all manner of noninvasive treatments — from a strict diet to retiring from his stressful job — before having a stent implanted.

The executive had been very smart to seek more information, and now, by coming to Brown, he was very lucky, too. Brown is part of the RightCare Alliance, a collaboration between health-care professionals and community groups that seeks to counter a trend: increasing medical costs without increasing patient benefits. As Brown put it, RightCare is “bringing medicine back into balance, where everybody gets the treatment they need, and nobody gets the treatment they don’t need.” And the stent procedure was a classic example of the latter. In 2012, Brown had coauthored a paper that examined every randomized clinical trial that compared stent implantation with more conservative forms of treatment, and he found that stents for stable patients prevent zero heart attacks and extend the lives of patients a grand total of not at all. In general, Brown says, “nobody that’s not having a heart attack needs a stent.” (Brown added that stents may improve chest pain in some patients, albeit fleetingly.) Nonetheless, hundreds of thousands of stable patients receive stents annually, and one in 50 will suffer a serious complication or die as a result of the implantation procedure... (continues)
==
What the top U.S. health official should be saying on vaccines
Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price. (Joshua Roberts/Reuters)

During a televised town hall last week, the nation’s top health official was asked whether all children should get immunized for measles and other vaccine-preventable diseases. In his response, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price parsed his words carefully. He said state governments (presumably rather than the federal government) “have the public health responsibility to determine whether or not immunizations are required for a community population.”

His response angered many doctors and public-health officials, who say the top U.S. health official failed to give full-throated support for immunizations that prevent disease and protect communities at a time when anti-vaccine sentiment is on the rise.

Paul Sax, an infectious disease specialist at Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital, said Price might have been choosing his words carefully for political reasons. Price, he noted, belongs to the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, an organization that opposes mandatory immunizations. And there’s Price’s boss, President Trump, who has publicly expressed discredited concerns about vaccine safety.

So Sax decided to write tongue-in-cheek answers for what Price should be saying. The post appeared in the HIV and ID Observations blog published by NEJM Journal Watch... (continues)
==
What viruses are in blood transfusions? New study identified 19 human viruses in 42% of study participants. Mindblowing stuff @JCVenter twitter.com/humanlongevity…
==
Should 15,000 Steps a Day Be Our New Exercise Target?
A new study of postal workers in Scotland suggests we should aim for far more than the 10,000 daily steps commonly recommended...
==
New Vaccine Could Slow Disease That Kills 600 Children a Day
A lower-cost vaccine provides strong protection against rotavirus, a diarrheal disease, and could be particularly useful in poorer countries, researchers said...
==
Fewer Americans Would Be Insured With G.O.P. Plan Than With Simple Repeal
==
Millions Stand to Lose Addiction Treatment
Treatment for addiction grew with the Medicaid expansion under Obama’s health care act, but millions may lose coverage if the House approves a measure to repeal the Affordable Care Act...
==
A New Form of Stem Cell Engineering Raises Ethical Questions
As biological research races forward, ethical quandaries are piling up. In a report published Tuesday in the journal eLife, researchers at Harvard Medical School said it was time to ponder a startling new prospect: synthetic embryos.

In recent years, scientists have moved beyond in vitro fertilization. They are starting to assemble stem cells that can organize themselves into embryolike structures.

Soon, experts predict, they will learn how to engineer these cells into new kinds of tissues and organs. Eventually, they may take on features of a mature human being.

In the report, John D. Aach and his colleagues explored the ethics of creating what they call “synthetic human entities with embryolike features” — Sheefs, for short. For now, the most advanced Sheefs are very simple assemblies of cells... (continues)

A hint of the future arrived in a study published this month by researchers at the University of Cambridge. They built microscopic scaffolding into which they injected a mixture of two types of embryonic stem cells from mice.

This triggered communication by the cells, and they organized themselves into the arrangement found in an early mouse embryo.

While these artificial embryos developed from embryonic stem cells, it may soon become possible to build them from reprogrammed adult human cells. No fertilization or ordinary embryonic development would be required to build a mouse Sheef.
“We need to address this now, while there’s still time,” Dr. Aach said.

Sophia Roosth, a Harvard historian of science who was not involved in the new paper, said she did not think ethicists would have to start from scratch to find rules for these strange new Sheefs. She was optimistic that experts could draw on the many regulations in place for other kinds of research — including cloning, human tissue studies, and even studies on animals.
“I don’t think the baby has to be thrown out with the bathwater,” she said.

Henry T. Greely of Stanford University was less optimistic. While it is important to have a discussion about Sheefs, he said, it may be hard to reach an agreement on limits as enforceable as the 14-day rule.

“Whether you could come to some consensus is really doubtful,” he said.

Even if ethicists do manage to agree on certain limits, Paul S. Knoepfler, a stem cell biologist at the University of California, Davis, wondered how easy it would be for scientists to know if they had crossed them.

Spotting a primitive streak is easy. Determining whether a collection of neurons connected to other tissues in a dish can feel pain is not.
“It gets pretty tricky out there,” Dr. Knoepfler said. “They’ve opened the door to a lot of tough questions.”
douglas rushkoff (@rushkoff)
3/22/17, 9:19 PM
"The Future of Humans: A 2017 Reading List" linkedin.com/pulse/future-h… by @sarita on @LinkedIn





























Posted by Phil at 9:31 AM 20 comments:
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Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Final solo reports

(Midterm reporters: unless I've indicated otherwise to you, claim 20 runs for your report in your logs and on the scorecard. Those who prepared report slideshows, please post them if you can... via Slideshare.net, perhaps.)

Final solo reports consist of a presentation (with quiz & discussion questions, beginning on April 10-see below*) and two blog post installments. 1st installment due no later than April 24, though you may find it useful for your presentation to post earlier. 2d installment due May 1. Top 3 run-scorers are exempt from a 2d installment, but may still post for extra credit.

Think of it as parts one and two of a single report, with part two including your reaction to any constructive feedback you received to part one.

Don't think of it as a pasted formal paper, but as two related blog posts on a subject of interest to you. Use links instead of footnotes, include relevant graphics, video, anything that'll make it visually as well as thematically interesting.

Choose any relevant topic (check with me if you're not sure). You may continue to explore your midterm report topic, if you wish. Say why the topic interests you, and if you're discussing a particular philosopher/author say what you do or don't agree with in their thought.

Feel free to be creative with the format and approach. For instance, you might wish to "transcribe" an imaginary conversation between yourself and one or more famous philosophers.

Everyone should comment on at least two classmates' 1st report installments, and document that you have done so: include links to the reports you've commented on, in one of your own report posts.

Have fun!==
*T 10 - Final report presentations begin: Vincent, Kimberly, Kyle, Jonathan, Logan.

Th 12 - Chelsea Able, Shay Linell, Kayla Bean, Ana Aponte-Berrios, Cameron Oldham

T 17 - Iman Abdel Khalek, Selwa Kanakrieh, Yazan Musleh, Alex Knight, Kimberly Warren

Th 19 - Zach Nix, Brittney Davis, Tariq McGruder, Clorissa Campbell, Ilija Zecevic

T 24 - Joseph Churchill, Katelyne Tatum, Andrew Bunch. Last class, Exam 3, Final solo report post installment 1 due, turn in personal logs, top three run-scorers identified

T 1 - 2d final solo report blog post due from all but three top run-scorers
Posted by Phil at 4:00 PM No comments:
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Monday, March 19, 2018

Brave New World related to medicalization and pharmaceuticalization

Medicalization: Current Concept and Future Directions in a Bionic Society

Antonio Maturo, Ph.D. in Sociology*
Author information ► Article notes ► Copyright and License information ►
This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.
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Abstract

The article illustrates the main features of the concept of medicalization, starting from its theoretical roots. Although it is the process of extending the medical gaze on human conditions, it appears that medicalization cannot be strictly connected to medical imperialism anymore. Other “engines” of medicalization are influential: consumers, biotechnology and managed care. The growth of research and theoretical reflections on medicalization has led to the proposal of other parallel concepts like pharmaceuticalization, genetization and biomedicalization. These new theoretical tools could be useful in the analysis of human enhancement. Human enhancement can be considered as the use of biomedical technology to improve performance on a human being who is not in need of a cure: a practice that is increasingly spreading in what might be defined as a “bionic society”.
Keywords: Bionic society, Biomedicalization, Human enhancement, Medicalization, pharmaceuticalization, Risk
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Introduction

The manipulation and transformation of human nature by biomedical technology is increasing. As Foucault (1976[10]) stated in the 1970's the sovereign-power of death (of giving death to people) has been replaced by the power of the State to give and improve life: biopower (and the welfare State is the main example of this). According to the Foucauldian scholar Nikolas Rose, molecular manipulation is the main trait of our society:
The “style of thought” of contemporary biomedicine considers life at the molecular level as a group of intelligible vital mechanisms which can be identified, isolated, manipulated, mobilized and recombined in intervention practices which are not constrained by the apparent normativity of a natural vital order (Rose, 2006, p.9[28]).
Therefore, it can be said that we are living in a society which is becoming increasingly bionic. That is, biology and genetics are seen as the main forces which affect human life, with social factors playing a minor role. Medicalization, and its developments, is the main component of the bionic society of today.
Medicalization can be defined as the process by which some aspects of human life come to be considered as medical problems, whereas before they were not considered pathological. In sociology, medicalization is not a “new” concept. Forty years ago Ivan Illich (1973[17]) made an accurate analysis of the iatrogenesis of many illnesses. The word iatrogenesis comes from the ancient Greek and means “originating from a physician/treatment”. According to Illich, social iatrogenesis is the proliferation of diseases caused by the extension of medical categories on everyday life. One practical example of social iatrogenesis given by Illich is the lowering of levels of tolerance for psychological discomfort or sadness, which brought about a steady increase of the diagnosis of depression (Horwitz and Wakefield, 2009[15]). In the same period, Foucault (1976[10]), considered the process of indefinite medicalization to be one of the main features of society. He stressed the role of doctors in deciding what was normal and what was pathological. In the words of Zola:
From sex to food, from aspirins to clothes, from driving your car to riding the surf, it seems that under certain conditions or in combination with certain other substances or activities or if done too much or too little, virtually anything can lead to medical problems (Zola, 1982, p. 49[34]).
In more recent times, Peter Conrad (Conrad, 2007[8]) has proposed to consider medicalization in three respects:
  • Conceptual medicalization: When medical lexicon is used to define non-medical entities (for example, the natural drooping of breasts after pregnancy diagnosed as “mammary ptosis”);
  • Institutional medicalization: When physicians have the power to steer non-medical personnel – what Eliot Freidson called “professional dominance” (Freidson, 1970[11]; for example, physicians being managers of hospitals without having any academic title in management or business administration);
  • Interactional medicalization: When the physician, in interaction with the patient, redefines a social problem into a medical one (for example, homosexuality was listed as a pathology in the DSM until 1983).
Yet, according to Conrad, there are also other “engines of medicalization”. These engines are consumers, biotechnology and managed care.
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Engines of Medicalization

Consumers

Consumers are a factor of medicalization because health is increasingly becoming, and has become, a commodity (Turner, 2004[32]). People are increasingly using medical terminology in order to analyse their own health influenced from watching TV and browsing the internet (Barker, 2008[4]). Also, advertisements encourage people to consider health needs that otherwise they would not have thought about. New social representations of health and illness are emerging, for instance, the representations of idealized beauty and the parallel “treatments” of cosmetic surgery. The body is increasingly considered as a “text” through which people may transmit signals and information (Turner, 2004[32]).

Technology

Technology is a driving factor of medicalization for many reasons. First, new diagnostic tools mean more chances to discover illnesses. Yet, often the risk factors are considered as pathological and therefore treated. Sometimes, the “discovery” of new diseases is done by pharmaceutical firms which also have the “right” treatment (‘disease mongering’).

Managed care

Managed care is also a force of medicalization. For instance, considering depression as a condition caused by a chemical imbalance legitimates a treatment based on pills rather than on expensive psychotherapy (Barker, 2008[4]). On these bases, social problems are transformed into medical ones. In the US, according to Conrad:
It seems likely that physicians prescribe pharmaceutical treatment for psychiatric disorders knowing that these are the types of medical interventions covered under managed care plans, accelerating psychotropic treatments for human problems (Conrad, 2007, p. 141[8]).
In the US, in 1997, laws regulating pharmaceutical advertisement became less restrictive which resulted in the expenditure for prescription drugs ads to increase four times between 1998 and 2007 (Murray, 2009[27]). The increase in advertising has also strongly stimulated disease mongering, which is the “invention of illnesses” (Moynihan e Cassels, 2005[26]). A commonly used strategy in the advertisement for drugs is the overstatement of the risks of certain situations which mislead consumers. People are increasingly encouraged to discover some diseases through a self-diagnosis based on a check-list (Jutel, 2009[18]).
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From Medicalization to Pharmaceuticalization?

The use of pharmaceuticals and medicalization are not the same thing. Some aspects of medicalization are not directly connected to the use of drugs: conceptual and interactional medicalization, for instance (Conrad, 2009[7]). Moreover, there are situations of medicalization which do not include the consumption of pharmaceuticals as their main feature, even if pharmaceuticals have been used in those situations. This is the case of the medicalization of death, the medicalization of pregnancy and the medicalization of beauty. There are even pathological conditions in which the treatment is neither a pharmacological one nor a medical one strictly speaking, but require the patient to comply with a specific regimen or way of life. A typical example of this is coeliac disease, which is caused by a reaction to gliadin, a prolamin (gluten protein) found in wheat. At present, the only effective treatment is a life-long gluten-free diet.
According to Abraham (2010[1]), the socio-cultural aspects of pharmaceutical consumption have peculiar features which cannot be properly analysed by the medicalization framework; therefore, he proposes the concept of pharmaceuticalization. Pharmaceuticalization can be defined as “the process by which social, behavioral, or bodily conditions are treated, or deemed to be in need of treatment/intervention, with pharmaceuticals by doctors, patients or both” (Abraham, 2010, p. 290[1]). Main examples include: the treatment of mood by anxiolytics or antidepressants, treatment of ADHD with Methylphenidate (e.g., Ritalin®) and treatment of erectile dysfunction with Sildenafil citrate (e.g., Viagra®). In addition, even the treatment of heart-disease risk factors with cholesterol-lowering drugs, such as statins, may be considered an example of pharmaceuticalization. It should be noted that all the conditions mentioned above could also be treated in non-pharmaceutical ways – as they were in the past. The treatments could be medical, such as a psychotherapy, or non-medical, such as a change in lifestyle.
Among the factors that have fostered pharmaceuticalization, Abraham proposes to consider three main causes: the political economy of the pharmaceutical industry, the deregulatory state ideology, and consumerism. While the concept of consumerism has already been described, the other two factors deserve particular attention.
Abraham (2010, p. 299-301[1]) describes “deregulatory state ideology” as the pharmaceutical legislation in the EU, North America, Australasia that requires manufacturers to demonstrate the quality, safety and efficacy of their products (but not their therapeutic advance) in order to have a new drug approved by regulatory agencies. Therefore, there can be pharmaceutical innovation without therapeutic advance. As stated by Donald Light:
When pharmaceutical companies say a drug is “effective” or “more” “effective,” they usually mean more effective than a placebo, not more effective than existing drugs. (Light, 2010, p.7[19]).
Pharmaceutical companies are increasingly investing in advertising and marketing and decreasing their financial efforts devoted to research for new therapies (Angell, 2004[2]). As said, an important component of marketing campaigns is advertising: “direct-to-consumer advertising does not simply attempt to sell particular products but strives to reshape consumers’ understanding of their problems into conditions that should be treated by medications” (Horwitz, 2010, p.110-111[13]).
It is not only the loosening of advertising restrictions, marketing campaigns and consumerism that foster pharmaceuticalization and medicalization. Science also plays a great role in legitimising this tendency. For example, as it is shown in the next section, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, by giving the description of many mental disorders in terms of symptoms, strongly suggests pharmaceutical treatments.

Normality and pathology in mental health

Mental health is likely the most medicalized aspect of human life. Emotions like sadness and shyness, if framed through a pathologizing gaze, can easily be turned into illnesses (Maturo, 2010a[22]). It is hard to believe that 6% of the population in Great Britain meet the criteria for major depressive disorder at any time (Scott and Dikey, 2003[29]) and even harder to believe that more that 5% of Americans suffer from bipolar disorder: “Awareness among general practitioners and psychiatrics that the broad clinical spectrum of bipolar disorders probably affects 5% of the population – rather than the often quoted figure of 1% – is regrettably low” (Smith, Ghaemi and Craddock, 2008, p. 398[31]).
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) is the commonly used basis for any mental disorder diagnosis. While the first two editions of the DSM were characterized by a strong theoretical view, mainly based on psychoanalysis, DSM-III and, even more, DSM-IV, try to be atheoretical and symptom-based. Thus, in the two last versions of the DSM, the psychiatric nosography became more and more descriptive and standardized, although not value-free (Fulford, 2010[12]). To define an illness, the emphasis was put on symptoms, while causes were neglected. [Of course one may say causes were not neglected; they are simply not known, since ‘etiology unknown’ is still the hall-mark of psychiatry.] The focus of DSM-III and DSM-IV therefore shifted from illnesses to disorders and syndromes – the latter being multiple symptoms. The key-assumption of this “diagnostic psychiatry” is that “overt symptoms indicate discrete underlying diseases. Whenever enough symptoms are present to meet the criteria for a diagnosis, a particular mental disorder exists” (Horwitz, 2002, p. 106[14]). Therefore the main consequences of the latest version of the DSM are reductionism and the proliferation of disorders (by shifting from illnesses to syndromes, the complexity of mental illness is reduced, because it coincides with its symptoms and virtually almost everything may be considered pathological), and the likeliness of pharmaceutical treatment (if disorders become more easily identifiable and cognisable it becomes easier to associate them with a specific therapy, and if the task of psychiatry is to relieve symptoms, then medicines are the best way to do so). This trajectory puts psychiatry together with all the other medical specialties, aligning mental illness with any other kind of biological disease.
It is not possible to demonstrate that corporations are involved in the designing of the DSM, but, in describing the onset of the medicalization of mood, Horwitz and Wakefield present a good point:
There is no evidence that pharmaceutical companies had a role in developing DSM-III diagnostic criteria. Yet, serendipitously, the new diagnostic model was ideally suited to promoting the pharmaceutical treatment of the conditions it delineated (Horwitz and Wakefield, 2007, p.182[16]).
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Risk in the Theoretical Discourse

Presently, the concept of risk seems to be very important in contemporary society. According to many scholars we have passed from a society dominated by dangers to a society dominated by risks.
According to Douglas (1992[9]), risks are the outcome of human actions, while dangers have to do with the unpredictability of nature. If damages can be seen as a consequence of a decision of ours then we can speak about risk; if damages are caused by something overcoming our will, something “external”, then we can speak about danger. To use an extreme example: while in the past, falling ill with cancer was a danger, nowadays, thanks to the screening technology, falling ill with cancer has become a risk of a missed prevention. To view it in a different way, Luhmann (1993[21]) wrote that when man discovered the umbrella, rain was not a danger anymore but a risk. Another important feature of risk is calculability: the word “risk” has its origin in the field of insurance, and therefore one of its main connotations is the likeliness of an event to occur.

Risk and health

In the discourse on health, risk may be connected to the individualization of social problems, biological reductionism, and the shifting borders between normal and pathological. As it will be shown in the next pages, it can be easier for political institutions to embrace a clinical and biological definition of a disease instead of addressing the social causes underlying these pathological conditions. Considering illness as an external risk, the responsibility to avoid it is shifted from social policy to the individual, despite pathology being strongly connected to social and economic conditions. Nowadays, health is increasingly considered an individual responsibility. People should avoid smoking, becoming overweight, and they are also encouraged to push back the ageing process as much as possible. Therefore, prevention is socially constructed as an individual duty. Moreover, huge investments in diagnostics and genetics have led to neglect of social causes of diseases, and to consider them only in biological terms (Clarke and Shim, 2011[6]). Although many researchers have demonstrated that in rich countries social determinants are more influential in health status than an increase in health expenditure, social and economic conditions are seldom mentioned in biomedical discourse on health (Link and Phelan, 2010[20]). It is cheaper, and simpler, to label an unruly child as someone suffering from a chemical imbalance instead of taking other factors into account: the possible unemployment of parents, poverty of the neighborhood, or other issues in the family. If we consider depression as the effect of the lack of serotonin in the brain, instead of the natural and normal answer to a condition of deprivation and stress, we implicitly reject the role of social policy. As Barker puts it:
It is far more politically expeditous to make claims on the welfare state (even the miserly US welfare state) to address discrete medical needs of homeless patients, than it is to fulfil the rights of homeless citizens to housing and employment. Again in the US context, it is more politically palatable to expand State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) than it is to address what sociological research consistently demonstrates to be the single best predictor of children's current and future health status; namely, social class (Barker, 2009, p. 101[3])
Doing so, an individualistic and neoliberal view of society is legitimised, in which the State has increasingly less responsibilities for citizens’ welfare. Moreover, the emphasis on a healthy lifestyle may be misplaced. There is evidence that the “cause of causes” of illness is the socio-economic status (Link and Phelan, 2010[20]). The connection between lifestyle and health, on which the risk-factor model is based, is only one side of the etiological link between health and society. The risk-factor model's explanation for health inequalities proceeds according to a seemingly persuasive logic: “social conditions are related to health because of their influence on a host of risk factors that lie between social conditions and disease in a chain of causality” (Link and Phelan, 2010, p. 3[20]). What is lacking in the risk-factor model is that social and economic conditions powerfully shape the capacity to modify or eliminate identified risk factors. They put people “at risk of risk”. It is difficult to eat expensive organic food if you are unemployed. Perhaps people are not inclined to jog if they live in an urban sprawl close to the junction. And it is easier to quit smoking if you are a member of Harvard soccer team than a member of a gang in a Brazilian slum.
There are two more features of the idea of risk that should be mentioned. The first one is connected to the threshold. One of the most effective ways to widen the pathological sphere is to alter the threshold level. It is by lowering the threshold at which someone is considered “pre-sick” that prevention has been medicalized. The main examples of the medicalization of prevention is hypertension. Blood pressure rises with age and is one of the several factors that can increase the risk of stroke:
But because blood pressure is amenable to drugs, a world of marketing and guidelines developed around it. What constitute “high” blood pressure is open to opinion, and the US guidelines set by expert panels have periodically lowered the criteria so that millions of more people are labelled as ‘having hypertension’, or now ‘prehypertension’, and being ‘at risk’ of heart disease (Light, 2010, p. 22[19]).
The second feature is a distorted idea of causality. An example of this distortion is the concept of genetization: the tendency to consider genes as the main factor responsible for any kind of condition. In this kind of reductionism: “a complex understanding of the causes of human development is displaced by one in which genes are perceived as the ‘true cause’ of difference” (Shostak and Frese, 2010, p. 419[30]). Research has demonstrated that genes are “our destiny” only in a few cases (Maturo, 2009b[25]).
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Human Enhancement and Biomedicalization

In the debate on medicalization, a new topic has emerged in the last years: the opportunity of using biotechnology – mainly drugs – not to treat pathology, but to enhance normal conditions. Human enhancement can be defined as the use of biomedical technology to improve (physical, cognitive, emotional or social) performance on a human being who does not need any cure (Maturo, 2009a[24]). Human enhancement is part of the concept of biomedicalization proposed by Clarke and Shim (2011[6]). Biomedicalization differs from the concept of medicalization because it takes into consideration the aspect of human enhancement and also the role of pharmaceuticalization in contemporary society (Cipolla, 2010[5]).
Indeed, the topic of human enhancement has everything to do with the shift of medicine, or a section of it, from the treatment of pathologies to the optimization and possibility of going beyond normality: better than well. Some examples of human enhancement are: prosthetic limbs, cosmetic surgery, and emotional and cognitive enhancement through pharmaceuticals. The line between the medicalization of pathologies and the enhancement of normality is blurred, as there are actions carried out at the borders that do not fall into either category. Moreover, it is likely that the enhanceable of today becomes the pathological of tomorrow, which brings about an ever-broader area in which biomedical interventions are required [Figure 1].
Figure 1
Figure 1
Flowchart of paper
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Concluding Remarks: Are we Heading toward a Bionic Society?

The World Health Organization definition's of health as a “state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity” (WHO, 1946[33]) has been often criticized because it proposes an extremely wide and ambitious concept of health. An edenic idea of health! Instead, it seems that today these three dimensions – body, psyche and society – are fully involved in the medicalization process. Moreover, health should be considered more as a “process”, than a state. A process in which “physical, mental and social well-being” is constructed, maintained and rebuilt. An asyntotic process without an end – as biocorporations and advertising know very well.
As already stated, the expansion of medical categories into social spheres, which were not previously “read” medically, may play a reassuring role. For example, if we think that boisterous children are sick and have neurological problems and chemical imbalances, we allow ourselves to avoid looking at social problems like unemployment, social cohesion in ghettos and integration of the immigrants. A pill which works on serotonin levels is easy to prescribe, and is cheaper and “cleaner” than any social policy. Another example of medical colonization can be seen in food. In supermarkets, shelves of health foods are constantly growing. Food is increasingly advertised, packed and branded in ways which connect it to medical contexts. We have probiotic yoghurt which reduces the risk of ictus, blueberry drinks which improve our vision, and mineral waters which “purify”.
To sum up, the bionic society can be described by at least three intertwining forces:
  • A strong emphasis on health as considered by its chemical, neurological and genetic dimensions;
  • The extension of medical ways of thinking (not only medical treatments) in areas which were not medicalized previously – or were only partially medicalized – like prevention, cosmetic, nutrition;
A growing pharmaceuticalization which questions the borders between normality, pathology and enhancement, and therefore also between nature and nurture (Maturo, 2010b[23]).
In the near future, it seems that a bionic healthscape could lead to the transformation of social problems into medical problems of the single individual, therefore de-responsabilizing political and social institutions. On the other side, the emphasis on genetics and neurological dimensions might foster fatalism and passivity, leading to the deresponsabilization of the individuals for their health choices. All of this happening in a context where the lines between natural and artificial, normal and pathological, treatment and enhancement, are increasingly blurred.

Take home message

The transformation of human conditions into medical problems is increasing. In the past, medical profession was considered the main driver of this trend. Today other factors should also be taken into consideration: consumerism, managed care, marketing for pharmaceuticals and biotechnology.
The risk of medicalization is to neglect the role of social determinants in shaping human health. A new phenomenon which is emerging is human enhancement, that is, use of biomedical devices to optimise normality (and not to cure illness).[34]

There is a total of  20 quiz questions for a possible 5 runs.
Quiz for 3/20/2018

1.     Define medicalization.
2.     What is social iatrogenesis?
3.     What is a practical example of social iatrogenesis?
4.     Peter Conrad has proposed to consider medicalization in what three respects?
5.     What are the engines of medicalization?
6.     (T/F) The use of pharmaceuticals and medicalization are the same thing.
7.     What aspects of medicalization are not directly connected to the use of drugs?
8.     (T/F)  There are situations of medicalization which do not include the consumption of pharmaceuticals as their main feature.
9.     What situations of medicalization do not include the consumption of pharmaceuticals as their main feature?
10.  Define pharmaceuticalization.
11.  Give an example of pharmaceuticalization.
12.  What three main causes are proposed to have fostered pharmaceuticalization?
13.  (T/F) Causes of mental illness are often described as etiology unknown.
14.  What are the main consequences of the latest version of the DSM?
15.  Define risks.
16.  Define dangers.
17.  As related to health, risk may be connected to what?
18.  (T/F) It can be easier for political institutions to embrace a clinical and biological definition of a disease instead of addressing the social causes underlying these pathological conditions.
19.  What is lacking in the risk factor model?
20.  Define human enhancement.

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My Fall "Philosophy of Happiness" course will be in HONR 117 on T/Th at 4:20 pm, starting AUG 26... PHIL 3345-BIOETHICS... phil.oliver@mtsu.edu

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Dr. Phil Oliver-Office hours TTh 11-1 & by appt.

Dr. Phil Oliver-Office hours TTh 11-1 & by appt.
300 James Union Bldg. (JUB), and via Zoom

TEXTS Spring 2025

BIOETHICS: THE BASICS (Campbell) ”the word ‘bioethics’ just means the ethics of life”... BEYOND BIOETHICS (Obasogie) “Bioethics’ traditional emphasis on individual interests such as doctor-patient relationships, informed consent, and personal autonomy is minimally helpful in confronting the social and political challenges posed by new human biotechnologies”... THE PREMONITION (Lewis) "The characters you will meet in these pages are as fascinating as they are unexpected. A thirteen-year-old girl’s science project on transmission of an airborne pathogen develops into a very grown-up model of disease control. A local public-health officer uses her worm’s-eye view to see what the CDC misses, and reveals great truths about American society"... WHAT WE OWE THE FUTURE (MacAskill) "argues for longtermism: that positively influencing the distant future is our time’s key moral priority. It’s not enough to reverse climate change or avert a pandemic. We must ensure that civilization would rebound if it collapsed; counter the end of moral progress; and prepare for a planet where the smartest beings are digital. If we make wise choices now, our grandchildren will thrive, knowing we did everything we could to give them a world full of justice, hope and beauty"... THE CODE BREAKER: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race (Isaacson) "we are entering a life-science revolution... Should we use our new evolution-hacking powers to make us less susceptible to viruses? ...Should we allow parents, if they can afford it, to enhance the height or muscles or IQ of their kids? After helping to discover CRISPR, Doudna became a leader in wrestling with these moral issues..."

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JPO bio

The author of "William James's Springs of Delight: The Return to Life, (VU Press, 2001) " Phil Oliver specializes in the American philosophical tradition with supporting interests in applied ethics (particularly Bioethics and Environmental Ethics), Anglo-American literature, history, humanism, naturalism, science and exploration, peripatetic ("walking & talking") philosophy, baseball, cycling, swimming, the pursuit of happiness, and the perpetual dawn of day. One of his favorite MTSU courses is The Philosophy of Happiness. He is academic advisor for minors in American Culture (American Studies), and a founding board member and current President of the William James Society (wjsociety.org). You can follow him on Bluesky (@osopher.bsky.social), Substack (philoliver.substack.com) and on his blogsite Up@dawn (jposopher.blogspot.com) but of course, as Immanuel Kant and Monty Python's Brian Cohen agreed: You don't have to follow anybody. "Sapere aude," have the courage to think for yourself. But not BY yourself. Good philosophy collaborates and converses.

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except in the light of evolution." --Theodosius Dobzhansky

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"The really vital question for us all is, What is this world going to be? What is life eventually to make of itself? The centre of gravity of philosophy must therefore alter its place. The earth of things, long thrown into shadow by the glories of the upper ether, must resume its rights..." William James, Pragmatism (Lec. III)

OFFICE HOURS Fall 2015: M-Th 1:00-2:00 pm, & by appointment. 300 James Union Bldg.*

FYI: I reply to email mainly during office hours, & not on weekends. Best way to insure a prompt reply to any query: call or come in during office hours or designated appointment time.

The Ethics Blog

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Bioethics Discussion Blog

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Some past texts

Autism in novels...
  • On Immunity: An Innoculation (Biss) “If we imagine the action of a vaccine not just in terms of how it affects a single body, but also in terms of how it affects the collective body of a community, it is fair to think of vaccination as a kind of banking of immunity.”
  • Gratitude (Oliver Sacks) “Oliver Sacks was like no other clinician, or writer. He was drawn to the homes of the sick, the institutions of the most frail and disabled, the company of the unusual and the ‘abnormal.’ He wanted to see humanity in its many variants and to do so in his own, almost anachronistic way—face to face, over time, away from our burgeoning apparatus of computers and algorithms. And, through his writing, he showed us what he saw.” -Atul Gawande, author of Being Mortal
  • Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End (Gawande) “We’ve been wrong about what our job is in medicine. We think it is to ensure health and survival. But really it is to enable well-being. And well-being is about the reasons one wishes to be alive.”
  • Bioethics-pick a chapter (Singer & Kuhse)
  • Bioethics: Principles, Issues, and Cases-pick a chapter (Vaughn, 2d ed)
  • Brave New Bioethics (Pence)-"These short pieces range widely over topics including reproductive and therapeutic cloning, assisted reproduction, organ donation, assisted suicide, genetically modified foods and public health care costs. Pence contends that the media have often misrepresented human cloning by reporting that it would produce an identical person to the donor. In fact, he argues, a human clone can never be an exact copy of the donor because the clone will grow up in different social and parenting environments. Pence also argues for lifting the ban on federally funded fertility research on embryos to benefit infertile couples for whom in vitro fertilization is too expensive..."
  • The Case Against Perfection: Ethics in the Age of Genetic Engineering (Sandel) “When science moves faster than moral understanding, as it does today, men and women struggle to articulate their unease…”
  • The Cosmic Serpent: DNA and the Origins of Knowledge (Narby) "This adventure in science and imagination, which the Medical Tribune said might herald 'a Copernican revolution for the life sciences,' leads the reader through unexplored jungles and uncharted aspects of mind to the heart of knowledge..."
  • The Echo Maker (Richard Powers, fiction) "Following a near-fatal accident, Mark Schluter is nursed by his reluctant sister. But when he emerges from his coma, Mark believes that this woman – who looks, acts, and sounds just like his sister – is really an identical impostor. As a famous neurologist investigates his condition, Mark tries to learn what really happened the night of his accident..."
  • Enough: Staying Human in an Engineered Age (McKibben)-"Reporting from the frontiers of genetic research, nanotechnology and robotics, he explores that subtle moral and spiritual boundary that he calls the "enough point." Presenting an overview of what is or may soon be possible, McKibben contends that there is no boundary to human ambition or desire or to what our very inventions may make possible. In an absorbing and horrifying montage of images, he depicts microscopic nanobots consuming the world and children born so genetically enhanced that they will never be able to believe that they reach for the stars as pianists or painters or long-distance runners because there is something unique in them that has a passion to try..."
  • Ethics at the End of Life (Oxford Handbook of)-"This handbook explores the topic of death and dying from the late twentieth to the early twenty-first centuries, with particular emphasis on the United States. In this period, technology has radically changed medical practices and the way we die as structures of power have been reshaped by the rights claims of African Americans, women, gays, students, and, most relevant here, patients. Respecting patients' values has been recognized as the essential moral component of clinical decision-making. Technology's promise has been seen to have a dark side: it prolongs the dying process..."
  • Every Third Thought: On Life, Death, and the Endgame (McCrum) "This is a deeply personal book of reflection and conversation – with brain surgeons, psychologists, hospice workers and patients, writers and poets, and it confronts an existential question: in a world where we have learnt to live well at ..."
  • The Handmaid's Tale (Margaret Atwood)
  • Human Enhancement (Savulescu and Bostrom)
  • Oryx and Crake (Margaret Atwood, fiction) "...an unforgettable love story and a compelling vision of the future. Snowman, known as Jimmy before mankind was overwhelmed by a plague, is struggling to survive in a world where he may be the last human, and mourning the loss of his best friend, Crake, and the beautiful and elusive Oryx whom they both love."
  • The Politics of Life Itself: Biomedicine, Power, and Subjectivity in ther 21st Century (Rose) "offers a much-needed examination of recent developments in the life sciences and biomedicine that have led to the widespread politicization of medicine, human life, and biotechnology."
  • Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies (Bostrom)
  • Patient H.M. : A Story of Memory, Madness, and Family Secrets (Dittrich) “Oliver Sacks meets Stephen King”* in this propulsive, haunting journey into the life of the most studied human research subject of all time, the amnesic known as Patient H.M., a man who forever altered our understanding of how memory works—and whose treatment raises deeply unsettling questions about the human cost of scientific progress."
  • The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right(Gawande) "The modern world has given us stupendous know-how. Yet avoidable failures continue to plague us in health care, government, the law, the financial industry—in almost every realm of organized activity. And the reason is simple: the volume and complexity of knowledge today has exceeded our ability as individuals to properly deliver it to people—consistently, correctly, safely. We train longer, specialize more, use ever-advancing technologies, and still we fail."
  • Ordinarily Well: The Case for Antidepressants (Peter Kramer)
  • The Gene: An Intimate History (Mukherjee)
  • Generosity (Richard Powers, fiction) A young woman's extraordinary capacity for cheer prompts a geneticist and advocate for genomic enhancement (a la Craig Venter) to exploit her and "announce the genotype for happiness."
  • The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer (Mukherjee)
  • The Art of Aging: A Doctor's Prescription for Well-Being (Nuland)
  • How We Die: Reflections on Life's Final Chapter (Nuland)
  • How We Live (Nuland)
  • Humanity Enhanced: Genetic Choice and the Challenge for Liberal Democracies (Russell Blackford)-". Some see the possibility of genetic choice as challenging the values of liberal democracy. Blackford argues that the challenge is not, as commonly supposed, the urgent need for a strict regulatory action. Rather, the challenge is that fear of these technologies has created an atmosphere in which liberal tolerance itself is threatened. Focusing on reproductive cloning, pre-implantation genetic diagnosis of embryos, and genetic engineering, Blackford takes on objections to enhancement technologies..."
  • The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (Skloot)
  • Orfeo (Richard Powers, fiction) "Composer Peter Els opens the door one evening to find the police on his doorstep. His home microbiology lab - the latest experiment in his lifelong attempt to find music in surprising patterns - has aroused the suspicions of Homeland Security... an Internet-fueled hysteria erupts..."
  • Principles of Biomedical Ethics-pick a chapter (Beauchamp & Childress)
  • Well and Good: A Case Study Approach to Health Care Ethics (Thomas et al)-"presents a combination of classic and little-known cases in health care ethics. These cases, accompanied by information about the major ethical theories, give students a chance to grapple with the ethical challenges faced by health care practitioners, policy makers, and recipients... includes an expanded discussion of feminist ethics, as well as new cases addressing pandemic ethics, humanitarian aid, the social determinants of health, research and Aboriginal communities, and a number of other emerging issues."
  • From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death (Caitlin Doughty)-see "Dead Weight" in links...
  • The River of Consciousness (Oliver Sacks)-The River of Consciousness is one of two books Sacks was working on up to his death, and it reveals his ability to make unexpected connections, his sheer joy in knowledge, and his unceasing, timeless project to understand what makes us ...
  • Polio: An American Story (Oshinsky)-"the gripping story of the polio terror and of the intense effort to find a cure, from the March of Dimes to the discovery of the Salk and Sabin vaccines"
  • Animal Rights: A Very Short Introduction
  • Medical Ethics: A Very Short Introduction
  • Life 3.0: Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (Tegmark)-“All of us—not only scientists, industrialists and generals—should ask ourselves what can we do now to improve the chances of reaping the benefits of future AI and avoiding the risks. This is the most important conversation of our time, and Tegmark’s thought-provoking book will help you join it.” —Professor Stephen Hawking
  • Dawn of the New Everything: Encounters With Reality and Virtual Reality (Jaron Lanier)-The AI pioneer reminds us again that we're not gadgets, but can use gadgets like AI to reinforce our humanity.
  • It's Not Dark Yet: A Memoir (Fitzmaurice)-"Written using an eye-gaze computer, this is an unforgettable book about relationships and family, about what connects and separates us as people, and, ultimately, about what it means to be alive."
  • The Bright Hour (Riggs)-"a book about looking death squarely in the face and saying 'this is what will be'... urges us to live well and not lose sight of what makes us human: love, art, music..."
  • When Breath Becomes Air (Kalinithi) "At the age of thirty-six, on the verge of completing a decade’s worth of training as a neurosurgeon, Paul Kalanithi was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer. One day he was a doctor treating the dying, and the next he was a patient struggling to live. And just like that, the future he and his wife had imagined evaporated. When Breath Becomes Airchronicles Kalanithi’s transformation from a naïve medical student “possessed,” as he wrote, “by the question of what, given that all organisms die, makes a virtuous and meaningful life” into a neurosurgeon at Stanford working in the brain, the most critical place for human identity, and finally into a patient and new father confronting his own mortality."
  • Dying: A Memoir (Taylor)-"At the age of sixty, Cory Taylor is dying of melanoma-related brain cancer. Her illness is no longer treatable: she now weighs less than her neighbor's retriever. As her body weakens, she details the experience—the vulnerability and strength, the courage and humility, the anger and acceptance—of knowing she will soon die. Written in the space of a few weeks, in a tremendous creative surge, this powerful and beautifully written memoir is a clear-eyed account of what dying teaches..."
  • The Drug Hunters: The Improbable Quest to Discover New Medicines(Kirsch, Ogas)-"Big Pharma conglomerates spend billions on state-of-the-art labs staffed by PhD's to discover blockbuster drugs [but] luck, trial-and-error, risk, and ingenuity are still fundamental to medical discovery..."
  • Heavens on Earth: The Scientific Search for the Afterlife, Immortality, and Utopia (Shermer)-"concludes with an uplifting paean to purpose and progress and how we can live well in the here-and-now, whether or not there is a hereafter."
  • Zero K (Don Delillo, fiction) "...Ross is the primary investor in a remote and secret compound where death is exquisitely controlled and bodies are preserved until a future time when biomedical advances and new technologies can return them to a life of transcendent promise... 'We are born without choosing to be. Should we have to die in the same manner? Isn’t it a human glory to refuse to accept a certain fate?'”
  • Bioethics.net

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    Doctors, by Anne Sexton

    They work with herbs
    and penicillin.
    They work with gentleness
    and the scalpel.
    They dig out the cancer,
    close an incision
    and say a prayer
    to the poverty of the skin.
    They are not Gods
    though they would like to be;
    they are only human
    trying to fix up a human.
    Many humans die.
    They die like the tender,
    palpitating berries
    in November.
    But all along the doctors remember:
    First do no harm.
    They would kiss if it would heal.
    It would not heal.

    If the doctors cure
    then the sun sees it.
    If the doctors kill
    then the earth hides it.
    The doctors should fear arrogance
    more than cardiac arrest.
    If they are too proud,
    and some are,
    then they leave home on horseback
    but God returns them on foot.

    “Doctors” by Anne Sexton from The Awful Rowing Toward God. © Houghton Mifflin, 1975. WA

    Peripatetics

    The original peripatetics were Aristotle's students at the Lyceum, back in the day. Legend has it that they didn't sit indoors in orderly rows like students nowadays, but instead roamed the grounds walking-and-talking philosophy. I like their style, apocryphal or not... which is why I'm developing a Study Abroad course that will involve walking and talking in England beginning in the summer of '16. Stay tuned for more info on that.

    Naked Eye Observatory

    Naked Eye Observatory
    Prior to the invention of the telescope astronomy was done with the naked eye. Ever on the cutting edge, MTSU has its own 30-meter diameter, naked-eye, observatory...

    Delight Springs

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    About Me

    My photo
    Phil
    BIO. The author of "William James's Springs of Delight: The Return to Life," Phil Oliver specializes in the American philosophical tradition with supporting interests in applied ethics (particularly Bioethics and Environmental Ethics), Anglo-American literature, history, humanism, naturalism, science and exploration, peripatetic ("walking & talking") philosophy, baseball, cycling, swimming, the pursuit of happiness, and the perpetual dawn of day. One of his favorite MTSU courses is The Philosophy of Happiness. He is academic advisor for minors in American Culture (American Studies). You can follow him on Mastodon (@osopher@c.im) and on his blogsite Up@dawn but of course, as Immaneul Kant and Monty Python's Brian Cohen agreed: You don't have to follow anybody. "Sapere aude," have the courage to think for yourself. But not by yourself. Good philosophy collaborates and converses. (Full disclosure: finally replaced that profile photo caricature drawn by a London street artist many years ago. Current image from March 2020, at Spring Training in Scottsdale.
    View my complete profile

    Bioethics Links

    • "10 Best Bioethics Websites"
    • "Biggest Loser"-Why it doesn't work (On Point)
    • "I'm sorry, I can't face being a doctor anymore"
    • "Stop Subsidizing Big Pharma" nyt
    • "Why the Future Doesn't Need Us" by Bill Joy
    • A Profusion of Diagnoses: on medicalizing everyday life
    • Abortion-how to talk about it (Laurie Shrage, The Stone)
    • Addiction-everything we know is wrong (Hari, video)
    • Alt Med Advocates Are Wrong to Say Doctors Don’t Treat the Whole Patient (Mehta)
    • American Journal of Bioethics
    • antibiotic resistance (60 Minutes)
    • Atul Gawande on America's epidemic of unnecessary medical care
    • Atul Gawande on healthcare's price conundrum: price and quality of care are totally decoupled.
    • Atul Gawande's O.R. playlists (Desert Island Discs)
    • Beyond Therapy: Biotechnology and the Pursuit of Human Improvement-President's Council on Bioethics (Kass)
    • Bill Joy
    • Bioethics Bites (podcasts)
    • Bioethics Discussion Pages
    • Bioethics resources for students (Georgetown)
    • Bioethics Resources on the Web (NIH)
    • Center for Practical Bioethics
    • Chiropractic grows, gains partial acceptance
    • Cloning (President's Council)
    • Cloning ethics (Caplan)
    • Cloning ethics (Kass)
    • Cloning, ethical implications (Sandel)
    • Edible Education 101 (Pollan, UC-Berkeley)
    • Encyclopedic Dictionary of Genetics, Genomics, & Proteomics
    • Ethical implications of human cloning (Sandel)
    • Ethics of Human Cloning (Kass, Wilson) ch1
    • Euthanasia in nyt
    • Euthanasia-applied ethics sourcebook
    • Euthanasia-Assisted suicide, the philosophers' brief (NYRB)
    • Euthanasia-It's Not Dark Yet
    • Euthanasia-philosophical approaches to death w/dignity
    • Euthanasia-TED
    • Euthanasia, voluntary (SEP)
    • Feldenkrais Method
    • Forgotten lessons of the eugenics movement (NYker)
    • Genome Glossary
    • Glenn McGee on Twitter
    • Glenn McGee on YouTube
    • Graduate programs in bioethics
    • Hastings Center for Bioethics
    • How do you want to die?
    • How to teach doctors empathy (Atlantic)
    • Human cloning and human dignity: an ethical inquiry (President's Council on Bioethics)
    • Majoring in bioethics (Princeton Review)
    • MCAT (npr)
    • Medical scribes (Gawande)
    • Melbourne Center for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics
    • Michael Pollan, "An Animal's Place"
    • Michael Pollan's "Food Rules" & "Our National Eating Disorder"
    • Minimally invasive surgery: Steven Schwaitzberg, TED
    • Nanotech and nanomed, out of control-Bill Joy
    • Neuroethics: Neuroscience's Contributions to Bioethics
    • NYTimes Health
    • Oliver Sacks (Andrew Solomon)
    • One Doctor: Close Calls, Cold Cases, and the Mysteries of Medicine
    • Penn Center for Bioethics
    • Peter Singer
    • Philosophy Bites (podcasts)
    • Placebo Effect
    • Placebos: their biochemistry (nyt mag)
    • President's Council on Bioethics (Kass)
    • Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues
    • Princeton Center for Human Values
    • Psychedelics for wellness
    • Psychedelics: not so fast (Pollan)
    • Psychiatry's mind-brain problem
    • Religiosity of Medicine (Heather Davis)
    • Rudeness in hospitals
    • Stupid pills - one view of dietary supplements
    • TED Talks: Aging
    • Thanks Goodness (Dan Dennett)
    • The case for fetal cell research (nyt)
    • The new child abuse panic (nyt)
    • The problem with miracle cancer cures (nyt Apr'18)
    • The promise of Ecstasy for PTSD
    • The Real Doctor Will See You Shortly: A Physician's First Year
    • The real problem with medical internships (nyt)
    • The Scientist
    • The Scientist columns
    • The Trip Treatment (Michael Pollan on medical applications of new research into psychedelics)
    • Tim Minchin's "Storm" - on alt med & reason
    • Too much medicine (ABC)
    • Vanderbilt Center for Biomedical Ethics
    • Walk, jog, or dance, it's all good for the aging brain
    • What Doctors Feel: How Emotions Affect the Practice of Medicine (review & author video)
    • What does DNA sound like? Using music to unlock secrets of genetic code
    • When bad docs happen to good patients
    • Why docs hate their computers (Gawande)
    • Why doctors should read fiction
    • Why the Future Doesn't Need Us, by Bill Joy
    • Why the U.S. spends so much more than other nations on health care

    Food & environment links

    • Michael Pollan's "Food Rules" & "our national eating disorder"
    • Vegans go glam (nyt)
    • Vegan glow (s'show)
    • Screen addiction & children
    • Gluten-the myth
    • The case for engineering our food (Pamela Ronald, TED)

    Mortality links (aging & end-of-life issues)

    • 4 stories we tell ourselves about death (TEDx, Stephen Cave)
    • Aid-in-dying laws just a start (nyt)
    • Alzheimer's-Fraying at the Edges (nyt)
    • Atul Gawande remembers Oliver Sacks
    • Can we live longer but stay younger? (Gopnik)
    • Dead Weight-what do we do with our dead? (Jill Lepore)
    • Donald Hall on cultural attitudes towards aging (Brainpickings)
    • Dying with nothing to say (Katie Roiphe)
    • Dying with nothing to say-letters
    • End-stage chemo questioned
    • Far Shore of Aging ("On Being" w/Krista Tippett)
    • Go Gentle Into That Good Night (Roger Ebert)
    • How do you want to die?
    • How to make doctors think about death (nyt 4.28.19)
    • How to talk about dying (E.Goodman, nyt)
    • HT stay sharp as you age (wbur)
    • Khan Academy for health care
    • Last Day of Her Life (nyt mag)
    • Learning to die (nyt)
    • Life is short-that's the point (Stone)
    • Medicare to try a blend of hospice care & treatment
    • Never Say DIe: the Myth and Marketing of the New Old Age (Susan Jacoby)
    • No Longer Wanting to Die
    • On life & death after 85 (nyt video)
    • Rituals of modern death (Opinionator)
    • Roger Angell, "This Old Man"
    • The Death Treatment-When should patients with non-terminal illness be helped to die?
    • What can odd, interesting medical case studies teach us? (Siddhartha Mukherjee)
    • What it's like to live with early-stage Alzheimer's (On Point)
    • What really matters at the end of life (TED)
    • What should medicine do when it can't save your life? (Atul Gawande)
    • When Doctors Help a Patient Die
    • When I Die (Lisa Adams)
    • Whose job is it to talk to patients about death? (Atl)
    • Wisdom of the aged (nyt)
    • Zen & the art of dying well (nyt)

    The aging part and the death part

    "It doesn't phase me, the aging part; it's the death part that's really a drag!"David Bowie

    Inspiring senior citizens

    Stewart Udall

    Inspiring Centenarians

    Life lessons from a nonagenarian

    Will Durant

    Jimmy Carter

    [Centenarian marathon champ]

    Transhumanist (AI, life extension, genetic engineering etc.) links

    • A Dying Young Woman's Hope in Cryonics and a Future (nyt)
    • AI, Nick Bostrom, "Doomsday"
    • cryonics (bbc)
    • Cryonics an ethical means of life extension? (Cron)
    • Cryonics research frozen by fear (Guardian)
    • Cryonics video (Nova)
    • Cryonics-ethical black hole
    • Cryonics-live another 30 years and live "forever"
    • Cryonics-the conversation
    • Cryonics-the issues
    • Do we need humans? (TED)
    • Doomsday Invention
    • Ethical guidelines for AI (endorsed by Musk & Hawking)
    • Ethics of cryonics preservation
    • Ethics of the Singularity
    • Gene editing (On Point, 11.9.15)
    • Gene editing, potential & risks (WashPo)
    • Gene hackers & CRISPR (NYker)
    • Get ready to live a long long time
    • Orphan Black (on the BBC's "clone thriller," synthetic biology, & the quest for genetic perfection
    • Ray Kurzweil on the Singularity
    • Should We Die? (Atlantic)
    • Steve Jobs & the silicon afterlife (Guardian)
    • Transhumanism & Bioethics Conference (Princeton May 2017, CSPAN)
    • Upgrading your brain, tinkering with consciousness (TEDx)
    • What Happens When Computers Are Smarter Than Us? (Nick Bostrom, TED)
    • Why robots will always need us (Nicholas Carr)
    • Will you ever be able to upload your brain?
    • Zoltan Istvan

    Transhumanism explained

    Julian Baggini (@microphilosophy)
    1/19/18, 4:22 AM
    Transhumanism explained a 2.5 minute animation. @bbcideas bbc.com/ideas/videos/h…

    Vaccination links

    • "Flu Shots Are Dangerous" & other myths (abc)
    • "I asked my mom why she didn't vaccinate me"
    • "If vaccines work...?"
    • A Discredited Vaccine Study
    • A dissenting view: "How Vaccine Hysteria Could Spark a Totalitarian Nightmare"
    • An Epidemic of Fear
    • Anti-Vacc Arguments Analyzed (HuffPo)
    • Anti-vaccine activists have taken vaccine science hostage
    • Dad asks school to ban unvaccinated kids
    • Eula Biss "On Immunity" (video, 50")
    • Eula Biss "On Immunity" (video)
    • I Don't Want to be Right (NYer)
    • Immunity & Vaccines Explained (Nova, YouTube)
    • Jenny McCarthy's Dangerous Views
    • John Oliver on vaccination (Feb '18)
    • Measles letter from Roald Dahl
    • Measles Perilous but Preventable
    • Not up for debate: the science behind vaccination
    • On Immunity author interview
    • On Immunity by Eula Biss - reviewed in nyt
    • On Immunity: An Innoculation (video)
    • Pediatricians pressured to drop patients who won't vaccinate
    • Still Not Convinced You Need a Flu Shot? First, It’s Not All About You
    • The Panic Virus by Seth Mnookin
    • The Panic Virus reviewed in nyt
    • The vaccine safety myth
    • The Vaccine War (Frontline)
    • Vaccinations: Killers or Cures? (group report .ppt)
    • Vaccine issue arises at GOP debate
    • Vaccines-an unhealthy skepticism (video)
    • Vaccines-Calling the Shots (Nova, YouTube)
    • When Ike Trusted a New Vaccine

    5 books on health

    Five Books (@five_books)
    Epidemiology is as old as Hippocrates. The Chinese experimented with immunisation in 1000 BC. buff.ly/2fMuxOw
    ==
    More 5 books recommendations on health...
    ==
    5 books: genetics... genes...

    More books

    • Beyond Therapy: Biotechnology and the Pursuit of Happiness-President's Council on Bioethics (Kass), .pdf
    • Bioethics for Beginners Spg'13
    • Bioethics: The Basics (Campbell)
    • Generosity: An Enhancement Spg'13
    • The Case Against Perfection Spg'13

    Bioethics in Walker Library

    2d floor-

    An old Quizlet (thanks, Patricia)

    • Bioethics Q-&-A's

    MCAT

    • 2013 MCAT Essentials
    • Cracking the MCAT 2013-14 (Princeton Review)
    • Medical College Admission Test (MCAT)
    • Official Guide to the MCAT
    • The new MCAT ("will stress the psychological and social dimensions of medicine")-nyt

    MCAT Psychology and Sociology: Strategy & Practice

    Not a required text, but maybe worth a look-

    "Starting in 2015, the MCAT will add a section called "Psychological, Social, & Biological Foundations of Behavior." Next Step's book will give you an in-depth discussion of the strategies to attack each passage and several different approaches so you can find what works best for you. You will then be able to apply those strategies on four full-length MCAT practice sections... " amazon.com

    MCAT 2015

    • Foundational concepts
    • Grappling with the new MCAT (npr)
    • Kaplan Pop Quiz
    • MCAT 2015 Question of the Day
    • MCAT Psychology and Sociology: Strategy & Practice
    • MCAT tutoring-"Tutor the People"
    • Practice Sample Questions
    • Preparing for the MCAT
    • Sample interactive questions (nyt)
    • What's on it?

    Environmental Ethics

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    Ethics and morality

    Ethics is a more inclusive matter than morality; it concerns character whereas morality concerns actions. Our actions will mainly of course flow from our character, but the targets of enquiry in ethics (seeking answers to What sort of person shall I be?) and in debates about morality (What is the right thing to do in this case?) are obviously not the same... A.C. Grayling, The History of Philosophy

    Ethics Ethics

    Ethics Ethics

    Up@dawn

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    How To: Embed/Display PDF to Blogger

    Upload to Google Docs

    1. Open the Google Docs website (link in Resources), and then sign in with your Google Account to open your Drive page.
    2. Click the "Upload" button in the Drive sidebar and then select "Files" in the drop-down list to open the Choose File to Upload window.
    3. Click the PDF file you want to upload. The Upload Complete window displays the selected PDF file link and the Uploaded status.
    4. Click "Share" to open the Sharing Settings window, and then click "Change" to open the Visibility Options section. Select the radio button for "Public on the Web" and then click "Save" and then click "Done."
    5. Click the PDF link in the Upload Complete window to open the PDF in a window.
    6. Click the "File" tab on the PDF ribbon, and then select "Embed This PDF File" to open the window with the HTML code.

    From Google to Blogger

    1. Open your Blogger page in a new browser window or tab, and then click the "Create New Post" button to open the Post window. Click the "HTML" tab.
    2. Click inside the Google Docs HTML window from the previous section to highlight the embed code, right-click to open the selected text and then select "Copy" in the resulting menu.
    3. Right-click in the Blogger post window and then click "Paste" to paste the HTML code.
    4. Click the "Preview" button on the Blogger Post window to preview the opened PDF on your Blogger layout in a new window. Click "Publish" to post your blog.
    5. Click "OK" on the Google Docs window to close the window with the HTML code.
    Source: http://smallbusiness.chron.com/display-pdf-blogger-76069.html
    Posted by Nick Bilavarn

    Previously (Old announcements)

    MAR 4 Beyond 13-15; Code Breaker (CB) Intro & Part One-The Origins of Life... MAR 6 EXAM 1... Audio REVIEW now available... We're having GOOD conversations, but let's all remember that when we see classmates' hands in the air we should conclude our thought quickly and LISTEN... And generally it's more conducive to good conversation to respond not with a blunt "I don't agree" but rather with a receptive "I don't understand" or "tell me what you mean" etc. ...Now that we're relocated to JUB 202, let's arrange our seats in a semi-circular configuration (so we won't have to talk to the backs of heads)... == JAN 21. Introductions. Post your response to these questions, interpreted any way you like: Who are you? Why are you here? What do you think Philosophy has to do with Bioethics? What ethical/philosophical issues related to the pandemic, public health, gene editing technology, and/or the future of life occur to you? Do you have an easily-summarized personal philosophy? (Maybe something short like Charlie Brown's sister Sally's?--"No!")... == Thanks for a strong semester, everybody. Your collective performance exceeded ALL your predecessors, dating back many years. I predict great things for the class of '22! ...FYI-my turn for COVID finally caught up to me, I tested positive on Monday. Relatively mild, so far. Could be worse. So my ultimate parting word, now and always (again borrowed from WJ): "Keep your health, your splendid health. It's worth all the truths under the firmament."

    Parting words, and a final question

    Sapere Aude ("have the courage to think")... Don't stop asking questions! (But don't ask about your grade until May 11 , please.)

    The last question many of you ask during the semester is,

    "How do you determine a student's grade?"
    --"Well, I add up the grades for the essays, quizzes, the midterm and final. I average them out. Then I consult my stomach."
    That's what the late Fred Stocking, Williams College Shakespearian scholar, told his student (now NPR reporter) Barbara Bradley Hagerty. And it's now my stock answer to the perennial question too.
    I also look at how many runs (= participation points) you scored, of course. That's half your grade.

    But this has not all been about a grade. Again: sapere aude!

    And some final parting words, from Monty Python's Meaning of Life: "get some fresh air, go for a walk, read a good book now and then..."

    And from Kurt Vonnegut: "Hello, babies. Welcome to Earth. It's hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It's round and wet and crowded. At the outside, babies, you've got about a hundred years here. There's only one rule that I know of, babies—God damn it, you've got to be kind."

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