Center for Clinical Ethics and Humanities in Health Care
Bioethics Bulletin
Editor: Tim Madigan
November 1996
Volume Three, Number Eleven
Co-Directors: Gerald Logue, MD and Stephen Wear, PhD
Associate Director:
Jack Freer, MD
Research Associates:
Charles Jack and
Adrianne McEvoy
Address: Center for Clinical Ethics and Humanities in Health Care
Veteran's Affairs Medical Center
3495 Bailey Avenue Buffalo, NY 14215
Telephone: 862-3412 FAX: 862-4748
Website:
http://wings.buffalo.edu/faculty/research/bioethics/
Send E-mail to: wear@acsu.buffalo.edu.
Newsletter Distribution
This newsletter can be delivered to you via e-mail or fax.
(forward your e-mail request to: Jack Freer, MD at: jfreer@buffalo.edu).
If you prefer fax, call 862-3412 and
leave your fax number. We encourage and appreciate the use of
e-mail and fax distribution rather than paper for the newsletter.
Upcoming Center Meetings
The Center currently has three committees: Community Affairs,
Education and Research. All Center members are welcome to
participate in these committees.
Center Reading Group
The Center has established a second reading and research group
(beyond the "Health Care Policy Group"), the purpose of which is
to discuss in-progress publications and encourage new
publications and allied research activities. The group has chosen
to focus on the general area of of death and dying during the
Fall/Spring semesters. There will be one meeting held in
November, at the Center for Inquiry, 1310 Sweet Home Road,
between Maple and Rensch Roads (look for the twin red-and-white
gates). The date is November 13. Newcomers are welcome. Contact
Adrianne McEvoy
at the Center (862-3412) for information and materials.
November Events
November is a very important month for the Center. It is
sponsoring two events of note, each of which fulfills the
Center's mandate to try to bring greater harmony between Clinical
Ethics and the Humanities. We encourage all Center members to
attend these events, and to alert other interested parties as
well.
Leslie Fiedler Symposium
The first event is a symposium to honor distinguished professor
Leslie Fiedler, a respected literary critic, author and poet who
has long been one of the most influential and well-respected
instructors at SUNY-Buffalo, where he is the Samuel L. Clemens
Professor in the Department of English. In his latest book,
The Tyranny of the Normal: Essays on Bioethics, Theology & Myth,
he writes that "Ever since the mid-seventies, I have found myself
more and more often lecturing and writing not only on literature
proper, high or low, but on bioethics, with whose very name I was
not familiar until that very point."
Fiedler's new book, which has just released by David R. Godine
Publishers, deals extensively with such medical ethics issues as
the removal of life support, the role that doctors play in our
society, the trend back to herbal medicine, the reasons people
fear to donate their organs, and the media representation of
nurses. A special symposium to honor Fiedler and his new work will
be held on Friday, November 8th at 4:00 PM at the Center for
Inquiry, 1310 Sweet Home Road. There will be three presenters:
Jack Freer, Center Associate Director, will speak on "Images of
the Doctor in Literature and the Popular Arts"; "Bioethics
Bulletin" editor Tim Madigan will discuss "The Myths of Organ
Transplantation"; and Center co-director Stephen Wear will speak
on "The Tyranny of the Abnormal." Professor Fiedler will then give
an informal reply, and discuss his own interests in the overlap
between the humanities and bioethics. Copies of The Tyranny of
the Normal will be available.
The Center is honored to have Professor Fiedler's participation in
this event, and hopes that further discussions of the relevance of
bioethics to the humanities will follow from it. The symposium is
free and open to the public. For details, contact Tim Madigan at
636-7571; e-mail: timmadigan@aol.com
Symposium on Ethics and Values in Medicine
and the Biomedical Sciences
The second major event this month is a symposium held in
conjunction with the SUNY-Buffalo Sesquicentennial celebration,
from November 14-16. This will bring some of the leading experts
in the field together, to discuss the leading bioethical issues
on the contemporary scene.
Friday, Nov. 15, 1996
8:45 AM: Keynote Address: "Bioethics at the End of the Millennium:
Fashioning Health-Care Policy in the Absence of a Content-Full
Moral Vision." H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr. (Rice University and
Baylor University School of Medicine).
10:45 AM - 12:15 PM: Session One: "The Dilemma of Funding Health
Care: Technology, Resources, and Priorities." Talks: "A
Preventative Ethics Approach to the Managed Practice of Medicine,"
Laurence B. McCullough (Baylor University School of Medicine);
"Saving Lives, Saving Money: Shepherding the Role of New
Technology", E. Haavi Morreim (University of Tennessee Medical
School); "Toward Multiple Standards of Health Care Delivery:
Taking Moral and Economic Diversity Seriously", H. Tristram
Engelhardt, Jr.
12:15 PM - 1:30 PM: Luncheon (Included with Symposium
Registration)
1:30 PM:
A.) "Ethics Grand Rounds":
Case Presentations and
Discussions by Western New York Ethics Committees.
B.) "Conference in the Disciplines":
Managed Care in Western
New
York: Implications for Providers and Educators." Moderator: David
Nyberg (SUNY-Buffalo Graduate School of Education). Panelists:
David Triggle (Dean, SUNY-Buffalo Graduate School); Mecca Cranley
(Dean, SUNY-Buffalo School of Nursing), Chester Fox (SUNY-Buffalo
Department of Family Medicine, School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences); Susan Regan (Magavern, Magavern & Grimm; Member, New
York State Committee on Managed Care).
Saturday, Nov. 16, 1996
9:00 AM - 11:30 AM: Session Two: "The Human Genome Project."
Talks: "The Challenge of Human Genome Research for the
Professional Ethics of Medicine", Eric Juengst (Case Western
Reserve University); "From Promises to Progress to Portents of
Peril: Public Responses to Gene Therapy", Dorothy Nelkin (New York
University); "Lessons from the History of PKU Screening", Diane
Paul (University of Massachusetts at Boston).
11:30 AM - 12:30 PM: Lunch (on your own)
12:30 PM - 3:00 PM: Session Three: "The Physician-Patient
Relationship." Talks: "A Medicine of Neighbors", Kathryn
Montgomery Hunter (Northwestern University Medical School); "Can
I Trust You Now? Trust and the Physician-Patient Relationship:
Implications for Continuity of Care", Julie Rothstein (Yale
University); "Can Relationships Heal - Cheap?", Howard Brody
(Michigan State University).
3:00 PM - 5:00 PM: Session Four: Roundtable Discussion.
There is a special rate of $75.00 for Western New York
participants. For registration information, call 645-3705, or
e-mail James Bono at: hischaos@acsu.buffalo.edu.
Upcoming Lectures
Sunday, November 3. Gerald Jampolski, founder of the Center for
Attitudinal Healing, will speak about love, intimacy and death on
Hospice's Mitchell Campus in Cheektowaga, from 3:00 PM to 6:00 PM.
This lecture is sponsored by the Hospice Association and the Unity
Church of Practical Christianity. The cost is $35.00. To register,
call the Life Transitions Center by October 25, 1996 at 836-6460.
Monday, November 4. "Libertarian Perspectives on Abortion." A
panel discussion sponsored by the SUNY-Buffalo Forum for Real
Debate, the SUNY-Buffalo Department of Philosophy, the Center for
Inquiry, and the New York Association of Scholars. 3:15 PM -
5:45 PM, Student Union Theater, SUNY-Buffalo Amherst Campus.
Libertarians hold that politically the highest public good is the
protection of the right to individual liberty. This implies that
the purpose of law is to protect the basic rights of individuals
to life, liberty and property. Libertarians are in favor of free
markets and against restricting any peaceful activity, such as
consensual sexual behavior or drug usage. The issue of abortion
concerns libertarians because of their strong support for the
woman's right to control her own body, and because when another
human being begins to exist determines when such a being also has
rights that the law is supposed to protect. Does the fetus have
rights? This and other questions will be discussed by a panel of
distinguished libertarian speakers: Tom Flynn (Director, Center
for Inquiry and Senior Editor, Free Inquiry: The International
Secular Humanist Magazine); Doris Gordon (President, Libertarians
for Life); Tibor Machan (Professor of Philosophy, Auburn
University); John Walker (Research Director, Libertarians for Life).
Richard T. Hull, Professor of Philosophy at SUNY-Buffalo, will be
the panel moderator. For further information, contact Eva Koepsell
at 645-2444, extension 781.
Nov. 15-16. Workshop For Voluntary Associations Concerned With
Genetic Disorders. Hotel Plaza II, Toronto, Ontario. Sponsored by
the Huntington Society of Canada. The workshop will address the
critical ethical, legal and social issues arising from the
dramatic advances in genetics research. Special emphasis will be
placed on bioethics. For details, call 519-622-1002.
Call for Papers
The spring meeting of the American Academy of Religion-Eastern
International Region will be held from April 4-5, 1997 at
D'Youville College. In recognition of strong degree programs in
health related fields at D'Youville, one of the highlighted
themes will be "religion and health." Dr. Stephen Post (Case
Western University) will address the plenary session on "Religion,
Ethics, and the Genome Project."
Proposals for papers or panels are invited. Proposals are
especially encouraged in three areas to be highlighted at the
meetings: religion and health; religion in the Eastern
International Region; and the academic study of religion.
Submissions should include a one page abstract, the name, address,
telephone number and institutional affiliation of the person(s)
submitting the proposal. Although later proposals will be
considered, a first review of submissions take place at the
November 1996 national meeting of the AAR; so submission of
proposals by November 15 is encouraged. They should be sent to:
Paul R. Johnson, PhD; Program Coordinator AAR-EIR; Division of
Liberal Arts; D'Youville College, 320 Porter Avenue; Buffalo,
NY 14201. The office telephone is 881-7608; fax is 881-7760.
Members Corner
The Members Corner is designed to note research, presentations and
published articles and books by Center members. Please send all
such information to the newsletter editor so that the Center can
keep members informed about the work occurring in this area.
A review of Stephen Wear's Informed Consent: Patient Autonomy and
Physician Beneficence Within Clinical Medicine by Vivianne
Nathanson (British Medical Association - London) appeared in
International Digest of Health Legislation, Volume 47, Number 2,
pages 273-275.
Joseph Kelly, Associate Professor of Business Law at Buffalo State
College, had an article entitled "AIDS Phobia and Damages for
Emotional Distress" published in Torts, Insurance and
Compensation Law Section Journal, Vol. 24, No. 1, pages 8-12.
Comments and Suggestions
Your comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter are encouraged.
Please send them to the Center address, or by e-mail to the newsletter
editor, Tim Madigan - timmadigan@aol.com. We also need
information on upcoming events that would be of interest to Center
members. The deadline for the next newsletter is November 15th.