Posts in Archived
Bioethics on Air: Episode 24: Growing Acceptance of Assisted Suicide, Part 2—with PA Kris Correira

Physician assistant Kris Correira returns for the second part of her interview on assisted suicide. She explains how the mentality of assisted suicide leads to undertreatment through the misapplication of do-not-resuscitate (DNR) orders and advance directives, and she discusses the future of assisted suicide in the United States.

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Bioethics on Air: Episode 23: Growing Acceptance of Assisted Suicide, Part 1—with PA Kris Correira

Kris Correira, a physician assistant in Worcester, MA, describes why medical professionals are adopting a more positive attitude toward assisted suicide. She explains how this is attributable in part to social factors that promote a mentality of assisted suicide.

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Bioethics on Air: Episode 22: Organ Procurement and Allocation—with Barry Massa

Barry Masa, CEO of LifeCenter Organ Donor Network, explains the role that organ procurement organizations play in ensuring the ethical retrieval and allocation of organs. He also addresses some persistent concerns about organ transplantation in general.

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Bioethics on Air: Episode 17: Tutorial on the HHS Mandate—with Attorney Hillary Byrnes

Hillary Byrnes, an attorney for the US Conference of Catholic Bishops, provides insight into the controversial HHS Contraception and Sterilization Coverage Mandate as well as the religious liberty concerns with the original mandate and the subsequent accommodation. She also describes the recent exemption granted by the Trump administration.

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Bioethics on Air: Episode 15: Legal Aspects of Advance Care Planning—with Attorney Cameo Anders

Attorney Cameo Anders discusses how to properly identify a surrogate and use advance directives like living wills and health care powers of attorney to ensure ethical health care decision making after injury or at the end of life.

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Bioethics on Air: Episode 9: The Decline of Scientific Credibility—with Scientist Carr J. Smith

Dr. Carr J. Smith traces the roots of what he describes as a decline in scientific credibility to the loss of abstract reasoning skills. He then examines the long-term effects of this trend on the scientific community, education, and the culture at large.

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