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GLOBAL BIOETHICS: UTOPIA OR REALITY?
Developing World Bioethics, 2008ABSTRACTThis article discusses what ‘global bioethics’ means today and what features make bioethical research ‘global’. The article provides a historical view of the development of the field of ‘bioethics’, from medical ethics to the wider study of bioethics in a global context.
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Hastings Center Report, 2017
AbstractThis August, I participated in the conference “Genome Editing: Biomedical and Ethical Perspectives,” hosted by the Center for the Study of Bioethics at the University of Belgrade and cosponsored by the Division of Medical Ethics of NYU Langone Health and The Hastings Center.
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AbstractThis August, I participated in the conference “Genome Editing: Biomedical and Ethical Perspectives,” hosted by the Center for the Study of Bioethics at the University of Belgrade and cosponsored by the Division of Medical Ethics of NYU Langone Health and The Hastings Center.
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Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 1994
At the September 1992 Birth of Bioethics conference observing the 30th anniversary of the Seattle kidney dialysis program, Warren Reich discussed the “bilocated” birth of the term bioethics. He showed that the term bioethics was coined in Michigan by Van Rensselaer Potter and that the term was also apparently conceived of independently at about the ...
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At the September 1992 Birth of Bioethics conference observing the 30th anniversary of the Seattle kidney dialysis program, Warren Reich discussed the “bilocated” birth of the term bioethics. He showed that the term bioethics was coined in Michigan by Van Rensselaer Potter and that the term was also apparently conceived of independently at about the ...
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Bioethics, 2003
ABSTRACTWe live in a world with enormous disparities in health. The life expectancy in Japan is 80 years; in Malawi, 40 years. The under‐five mortality in Norway is 4/1000; in Sierra Leone, 316/1000. The situation is actually worse than these figures suggest because average rates tend to mask inequalities within a country. Several presidents of the IAB
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ABSTRACTWe live in a world with enormous disparities in health. The life expectancy in Japan is 80 years; in Malawi, 40 years. The under‐five mortality in Norway is 4/1000; in Sierra Leone, 316/1000. The situation is actually worse than these figures suggest because average rates tend to mask inequalities within a country. Several presidents of the IAB
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2020
This chapter explains the evolution of global bioethics, in relation to inequalities of health, vulnerability and climate change, from an international relations perspective. It also explores Western bias within global bioethics and how this might be overcome.
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This chapter explains the evolution of global bioethics, in relation to inequalities of health, vulnerability and climate change, from an international relations perspective. It also explores Western bias within global bioethics and how this might be overcome.
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Global Bioethics as Social Bioethics
2016According to Article 1 of the Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights of 2005, bioethics “addresses ethical issues related to medicine, life sciences and associated technologies as applied to human beings, taking into account their social, legal and environmental dimensions”.
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Global bioethics and communitarianism
Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics, 2011This paper explores the role of 'community' in the context of global bioethics. With the present globalization of bioethics, new and interesting references are made to this concept. Some are familiar, for example, community consent. This article argues that the principle of informed consent is too individual-oriented and that in other cultures, consent
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Global Bioethics and Scientific Sanction
The American Journal of Bioethics, 2017The idea of global bioethics developed by United Nations Education, Scientific & Cultural Organization (UNESCO) promotes the emergence of a new concept in which “reducing inequalities remains a fun...
Bagher, Larijani, Farzaneh, Zahedi
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2008
Abstract Medical care and biomedical research are rapidly becoming global. Ethical questions that once arose only in the narrow context of the physician-patient relationship in relatively prosperous societies are now being raised across societies, cultures, and continents.
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Abstract Medical care and biomedical research are rapidly becoming global. Ethical questions that once arose only in the narrow context of the physician-patient relationship in relatively prosperous societies are now being raised across societies, cultures, and continents.
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