Center for Clinical Ethics and Humanities in Health Care
Bioethics Bulletin
March 1997
Volume Four, Number Three
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 or over
the internet (forward your 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.
Center Listservers
The Center now maintains two automated e-mail listservers.
BIOETH-LIST is primarily designed for those in the Greater Buffalo
area and permits subscribers to post to the list. This list is
available for posting local announcements, as well as a medium
for discussion of relevant topics. It will also distribute the
Center newsletter, "Bioethics Bulletin." If you are on this list,
you can send a message to the entire list by addressing the
message to: BIOETHLIST@listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu.
BIOBUL-LIST is strictly used for distribution of "Bioethics
Bulletin" and is mainly for those outside of Western New York.
If you have further questions about this service,
contact Jack Freer at 887-4852 or at: jfreer@buffalo.edu.
Upcoming Center Meetings
The Center currently has three committees: Community Affairs,
Education and Research. All Center members are welcome to
participate in these committees.
Community Affairs Committee
There will be a meeting of the Community Affairs Committee on
Wednesday, March 5, at 4:00 PM, at the Erie County Medical Center,
Conference Room A, to discuss the ethics committee orientation
packet which the Committee has been working on for the past few
months.
Center Reading Group
he Center has established a reading and research group, the
purpose of which is to discuss in-progress publications and
encourage new publications and allied research activities. There
will be one meeting held in March, at the Center for Inquiry,
1310 Sweet Home Road, between Maple and Rensch Roads (look for
the twin red-and-white gates). On Wednesday, March 12th at
4:00 PM, Sherrie Lyons and James Moran, professors of philosophy
at Daemen College, will discuss "Organ Transplantation: Pros and
Cons." Contact
Adrianne McEvoy at the Center (862-3412) for information and
materials.
Debate on Physician-Assisted Suicide
The Center is consponsoring a debate with the SUNY-Buffalo
Departments of Philosophy and Political Science and the Society
for Real Debate, on the topic "Is There A Constitutional Right
to Assisted Suicide?" It will be held on Friday, April 4th
from 4:00 - 6:00 PM, in 106 OBrien Hall on the SUNY-Buffalo
Amherst Campus. Panelists include SUNY-Buffalo Professors Lee
Albert (Political Science), Richard Cox (Political Science),
Richard Hull (Philosophy), Anthony Szczygiel (Law), and
Canisius College Professor of Political Science Robert Klump.
For further information, please contact Paul Cornish at
645-2251, extension 511.
Special Symposium
The Center will be co-sponsoring, along with the SUNY-Buffalo
Department of Philosophy and the Center for Inquiry, a symposium
honoring the work of Patrick Romanell, PhD, to be held at 4:00 PM
on Friday, April 11th at the Center for Inquiry, 1310 Sweet Home
Road, Amherst. Romanell, formerly H. W. Benedict Professor of
Philosophy at the University of Texas at El Paso, and currently
a visiting scholar in the Department of Philosophy at the
University of Arizona at Tuscon, was a pioneer in the field of
medical ethics. For ten years, he was a resident philosopher at
the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston (1952-1962),
and for three years at the University of Oklahoma Medical Center
(1962-1965). Tim Madigan will give a talk on Romanells career in
medical ethics, and Romanell will speak on "Conflicts of Life and
the Problems of Good." Other speakers include SUNY-Buffalo
Professor of Philosophy Peter Hare and SUNY-Cortland Professor
of Philosophy John Ryder. A reception will follow. For details,
contact Tim Madigan at 636-7571.
Upcoming Lectures
Friday, March 7. "Beat the High Cost of Funerals: Death Be Not
Pricey." Ted Bieniek, Director of the Buffalo Memorial Society,
will discuss how to plan for a dignified funeral at a reasonable
price: pre-planning, cremation rather than burial, non-traditional
memorial services and other techniques. The Memorial Society is a
nationwide network of voluntary organizations that help members
secure mortuary services at a reasonable price. 8:00 PM, the
Center for Inquiry, 1310 Sweet Home Road, Amherst. For details,
contact Tim Madigan at 636-7571.
Thursday, March 20. "Problem-Based Learning in the New First-Year
Medical Curriculum." Presenter - Myron Glick. Faculty Development
Workshop - Sponsored by the School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences, SUNY-Buffalo, through the Department of Family Medicine.
7:30 AM, Erie County Medical Center, Family Medicine Modular
Complex conference room. For further information, contact Jason
Osborne at 898-4745
.
Thursday, March 20. "Community Clinical Ethics: Ethics Across the
Continuum of Care." Presenter: James Reagan, PhD. The program
consists of a presentation of pertinent bioethical issues,
consideration of cases and a panel discussion led by local
providers. Objectives include: Heightened understanding of
pertinent ethical issues; improved ability to respond to the
issues in both working with colleagues and caring for patients;
enhanced recognition of local interfacility factors that both help
and hinder extending continuity of care and establishing community
bioethics standards. The program will be held from 9:00 AM to
3:00 PM, at Sabella's of Union Station, Erie, PA. The registration
fee is $39.00, which includes lunch. To register, call
1-800-513-5019. The conference is sponsored by the Lake Area Health
Education Center (LAHEC) Website:
http://www.erie.net/~lahec/, E-mail: lahec@erie.net
Thursday, April 3. "Exploring the Connection Between Your Soul
and Your Workplace", a presentation by Matthew Fox, sponsored by
the Hospice Association. 9:00 AM - 1:00 PM, Junior League/Buffalo
News Education Center on the Hospice Mitchell Campus, 225 Como
Park Blvd., Cheektowaga. Fox, a best-selling author and renowned
theologian, is author of the books Original Blessing: A Primer
in Creation Spirituality and The Reinvention of Work.
The cost
is $35.00, including a continental breakfast. To register, call
the Life Transitions Center at 836-6460. The deadline for
registration is March 27.
Thursday, April 10-Friday, April 11. "Physician-Assisted Suicide:
A Multidisciplinary Discussion." Alumnae Hall Auditorium, Cedar
Crest College, Allentown, PA. Sponsored by the Ethics Institute,
a joint venture of Cedar Crest College and Lehigh Valley Hospital.
Speakers include: Timothy Quill, MD, professor of medicine and
psychiatry, University of Rochester School of Medicine and
Dentistry; George J. Annas, JD, MPH, professor and chair of health
law department, Boston University School of Public Health; and
Allen D. Verhey, PhD, chair and professor of religion, Hope College.
For information and registration material, call 610-740-3790.
Saturday, April 26. Spring Clinical Day 1997 - "Rationing of Health
Care." Buffalo Marriott Hotel. The morning program will provide
strategies for avoiding the pitfalls and maximizing the advantages
of various managed care organizations. Managed care will be
discussed from three perspectives: the hospital CEO, the private
physician, and the insurer. During the morning, a panel
discussion is planned with case histories illustrating some of
the tougher issues concerning the rationing of health care dollars.
At noon, the keynote speaker will be Barbara A. DeBuono, MD, MPH,
the Commissioner of Health
for the State of New York. In addition
to giving the luncheon address, Dr. DeBuono will be participating
in the Rationing of Health Care in America panel discussion. For
further information, call 829-2778.
Wednesday, May 14. "Ethics of Human Genetics: Christian, Jewish
and Secular Perspectives." Sponsored by Duquesne University and
St. Francis Medical Center. The conference will bring religious
and secular insights to bear on the implications of the human
genome project. For information, call Christine Sedlack at
412-622-4210.
***DATE CHANGE***DATE CHANGE***DATE CHANGE***DATE CHANGE***
Monday, June 30. Joseph J. Fins, MD will be in Buffalo for a
number of activities, including City-Wide Ethics Grand Rounds.
Dr. Fins is on the staff of Cornell University Medical College,
the Hastings Center, and is the Director of Clinical Ethics at
New York Hospital. More details concerning his visit will appear
in future issues of the "Bioethics Bulletin." (Please
note the change of date from the last "Bioethics Bulletin".)
SUNY-Buffalo Courses on Bioethics
Two courses devoted to Biomedical Ethics are being offered this
Spring semester at the SUNY-Buffalo South Campus. Center members
are welcome to attend individual sessions of interest.
Stephen Wear, PhD, Center co-director, is offering a course for
undergraduates, "Social and Ethical Values in Medicine,"
Tuesdays from 4:00 PM to 6:20 PM, Diefendorf 148. March
meetings are as follows:
-
March 25: Dr. Wear will offer a general introduction to
"Death and Dying," and then Dr. Jack Freer will lecture on legal
guidelines, with comments by area attorneys and clinicians.
A course on Graduate Research Ethics is being offered by
SUNY-Buffalo Professor of Philosophy Richard Hull. He is the
course coordinator and principal lecturer. The course was
previously offered under the auspices of the SUNY-Buffalo School
of Pharmacy, but in view of its general importance it has been
adopted by the Graduate School. It offers a broad analysis of
ethical issues in science, ranging from scientific misconduct,
intellectual property rights, data handling and preservation,
and issues around genetic diseases and information. The course
meets every Thursday, from 5:15 PM to 6:50 PM, in Room 111
Kimball Tower, South Campus. For further information, contact
the Graduate School, at 645-7315.
March meetings are as follows:
- March 6: "SUNY at Buffalos Institutional Animal Care and Use
Committee: A Real Meeting."
-
March 13: "Ethics of Experimental Design, Data Management."
Elaine Hull, PhD, Behavioral Neuroscience, Psychology; Bruce
Holm, PhD, OB/GYN, Pharmaceutics; Linda Duffy, PhD, Pediatrics.
-
March 20: Non Class (Spring Break)
-
March 27: "Ethics of Deception in Research: Pre-randomization
in the Lumpectomy Study." Richard Hull.
Conference News
On April 4-5, 1997 D'Youville College will host the Eastern
International Region Meeting of the American Academy of Religion.
Papers to be presented will include a wide range of issues in the
academic study of religion. Because of D'Youville's strong
association with degree programs in health care fields, one of the
featured themes at this conference will be religion and health.
Featured speakers include: Professor Stephen Post of Case Western
Reserve University, on the topic "Religion, Ethics, and the
Human Genome Project"; and Professor Leslie Fiedler of
SUNY-Buffalo, author of the recent book The Tyranny of the
Normal: Essays on Bioethics, Theology, and Myth. Other
anticipated papers deal with such topics as healing and symbols
in medicine and religion; near-death experiences; the Genome
Project; ethical and theological reflections on disability and
retardation; and religious and medical approaches to the concept
of the human body. Registration information and a program outline
will be available in late January. To be placed on a mailing list,
contact: Dr. Paul R. Johnson, Program Coordinator, AAR-EIR,
D'Youville College, 320 Porter Avenue, Buffalo, New York 14201;
fax: 881-7760.
Call for Papers
The Center for Multicultural Nursing & Health and African-Americans
for Humanism will sponsor a conference on "Ethical Dilemmas Arising
from Multicultural Differences in Health" in late Fall of 1997.
To submit abstracts and/or manuscripts for possible presentation,
or for additional information, contact: Essie Alberta Riley Eddins,
PhD, RN, SM, PO Box 889, Chautauqua Institution, Chautauqua, New
York 14722; phone and fax: 357-2479.
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.
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 March 15th.