From The Hastings Center <[email protected]>
Subject Rebuilding Trust
Date November 16, 2023 7:01 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Rebuilding trust in health care and science; future of bioethics; early signs of dementia

[link removed]


** November 2, 2023
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]


** Lab-Grown Human Eggs?
New reproductive possibilities raise societal questions
------------------------------------------------------------
The social implications of emerging reproductive technologies—including possibly creating human eggs in the lab--were explored last week by Hastings Center President Vardit Ravitsky and senior advisor Joel Michael Reynolds in interviews with the Boston Globe and Wall Street Journal. “The technology keeps pushing the envelope, not just biologically but conceptually,” Ravitsky told the Boston Globe. This research “links technology development with the most profound concepts of humanity,” expanding how families can be created and the societal-ethical implications of these novel possibilities. Read more ([link removed]) .


[link removed]


** Climate Bioethics Program Launched
Focus on justice and equity in the Caribbean
------------------------------------------------------------
The Hastings Center launched a program on climate bioethics in partnership with the Caribbean Research Ethics Initiative (CREEi) and Clarkson University. The program will recruit eight Caribbean bioethics scholars to spend a year learning about climate change and health and exploring ethics questions concerning research, policy, and practice. "There are a wide range of ethical questions related to how we ought to respond to climate change at local, national, and international levels,” said Hastings Center research scholar
Carolyn Neuhaus, an investigator on the project, “I'm excited to tackle these questions with our new cohort of climate bioethics scholars from a part of the world that is particularly vulnerable to climate change." Read more ([link removed]) .

[link removed]


** Where the Rubber Meets the Road
Fostering researcher-community engagement in big health data research
------------------------------------------------------------

Translational science is where the rubber meets the road for big health data research: taking what looks most promising from the bench—a lab or computer—and moving it more rapidly and effectively to the bedside—into clinical care, public health, and policy-making. Community expertise is essential to developing the novel bioethics tools and approaches (including artificial intelligence) to ensure the responsible and successful translation of research insights into better health for all. A new article in Ethics & Human Research proposes three tools for this implementation. Read the article ([link removed]) .
The Hastings Center seeks to ensure responsible health and science policy and practice. We work to secure the wisest possible use of emerging technologies and fair, compassionate, and just health care for people across their lifespan.

============================================================
** Twitter ([link removed])
** Facebook ([link removed])
** Website ([link removed])
** View this email in your browser ([link removed])
Copyright © 2023 The Hastings Center, All rights reserved.


We strongly value your privacy and would never sell, give, or otherwise share your information. Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis