Tuesday, July 31, 2012
In July 2012, the US Food and Drug Administration
released a risk evaluation and mitigation strategy for extended release pain
medications. How will this REMS affect patients in pain and the physicians who
treat them?
Lynn Webster, MD, is president elect of the
American Academy of Pain Medicine, and he discusses REMS and pain in this edition of The Bioethics Channel with Lorell LaBoube.
Link: FDA opioid safety plan focuses on physician education, Christine S. Moyer, American Medical News, July 23, 2012
Monday, July 23, 2012
Translating Research from Lab to Bedside
In this edition of The Frontiers Podcast we visit with Scott Weir, the director of the Institute for Advancing Medical Innovation at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
He was a panelist for a discussion entitled “The Reinvention of Translational Medicine” during a symposium in Kansas City on May 31st 2012.
For more information about Frontiers visit www.frontiersresearch.org.
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Docs and Assisted Dying
While this article addresses the question of physician assisted dying, for me it also prompts a couple of questions:
1. When should doctors stop trying to cure a terminal disease?
2. And should doctors stay at the bedside until death?
When my brother died two years ago of prostate cancer I noticed how some of the doctors involved with his care became physically distant as he neared death. Some didn't show up at all.
What's the right thing to do?
L2
Katie Moisse
ABC News
July 13, 2012
More than two-thirds of American doctors object to
physician-assisted suicide, according to a 2008 study published in the American Journal of Hospice and Palliative
Care. An editorial published in the New
England Journal of Medicine argues that removing doctors from assisted
dying could make it more available to patients.
Link: Redefining Physicians'
Role in Assisted Dying, New England
Journal of Medicine, July 12, 2012
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Accelerating the Translation of Research
John Spertus, MD |
In this edition of The
Frontiers Podcast we visit with John Spertus, MD, director of health
outcomes research at Saint Luke’s Mid America Heart Institute in Kansas City,
MO.
Dr. Spertus delivered a presentation entitled
“Accelerating the Translation of Research to Improve Care” during a symposium
in Kansas City on May 31st 2012.
For more information visit Frontiers: The Heartland Institute for Clinical and Translational Research at www.frontiersresearch.org.
For more information visit Frontiers: The Heartland Institute for Clinical and Translational Research at www.frontiersresearch.org.
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Bioethics: The Next Generation
So what about the next generation of bioethicists?
If the three young people featured in this edition of The Bioethics Channel are any indication, we can look forward to a fine crew of committed and smart medical professionals and educators.
What do you think?
L2
Emily Abdoler
Brett Kaylor
Daniel Vogelsang
Bioethics: The Next Generation is the subject of this
edition of The Bioethics Channel. Host Lorell LaBoube visits with three
individuals who have served as program interns at the Center for Practical
Bioethics, and how that experience has shaped their goals for the future.
Labels: bioethics; bioethicists; Center for Practical Bioethics; bioethics education
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
A Zettabyte too far?
Imagine going online to find human tissue for your research project.
You can, and you'll find more than 300 billion points of data for sale, according to Dr. Atul Butte of Stanford.
Orwellian? A zettabyte too far? You be the judge as you listen to this podcast.
Clinical and translational researchers are now creating
data by the zettabyte. In fact, there's so much data that it's becoming more
difficult to ask the right questions.
That's according to Atul Butte, MD, PhD, of Stanford
University. Dr. Butte also serves on the external advisory board for Frontiers: The Heartland
Institute for Clinical and Translational Research.
Monday, July 9, 2012
Removing Kidneys Before Death
Should we remove kidneys from a dying person before they
are dead?
That's the question addressed in the June 2012 edition of The
American Journal of Bioethics. Terry Rosell, the Rosemary Flanigan Chair at the Center for Practical Bioethics, talks about the ethics of
such an approach in this edition of The Bioethics Channel with Lorell LaBoube.
Monday, July 2, 2012
Autonomy Run Amok?
The Hastings Center
Writing about healthcare and bioethics is one thing.
Experiencing it first hand can be quite another.
A medical journalist talks
about her experience during a hospital stay in this edition of The Bioethics Channel with Lorell
LaBoube.
Labels: autonomy; medical ethics; bioethics; hospital ethics committees