| Adjusting the focus: A public health ethics approach to data research |
9 |
| On the reconceptualization of Alzheimer's disease |
9 |
| Solidarity and care as relational practices |
8 |
| The aims of expanded universal carrier screening: Autonomy, prevention, and responsible parenthood |
7 |
| Enriching the concept of vulnerability in research ethics: An integrative and functional account |
6 |
| Educational pelvic exams on anesthetized women: Why consent matters |
6 |
| Social value, clinical equipoise, and research in a public health emergency |
5 |
| Compensation for cures: Why we should pay a premium for participation in 'challenge studies' |
5 |
| Solidarity and the problem of structural injustice in healthcare |
5 |
| Cosmetic dentistry: A socioethical evaluation |
5 |
| A burden from birth? Non-invasive prenatal testing and the stigmatization of people with disabilities |
5 |
| Patient and public involvement: Two sides of the same coin or different coins altogether? |
5 |
| Community engagement in global health research that advances health equity |
5 |
| The positive value of moral distress |
5 |
| The international dimensions of antimicrobial resistance: Contextual factors shape distinct ethical challenges in South Africa, Sri Lanka and the United Kingdom |
4 |
| Even if the fetus is not a person, abortion is immoral: The impairment argument |
4 |
| Medical crowdfunding and the virtuous donor |
4 |
| The injustice of fat stigma |
4 |
| Public reason in justifications of conscientious objection in health care |
4 |
| Reproductive CRISPR does not cure disease |
4 |
| Displacement and solidarity: An ethic of place-making |
4 |
| Shame and HIV: Strategies for addressing the negative impact shame has on public health and diagnosis and treatment of HIV |
4 |
| Conflicting demands on a modern healthcare service: Can Rawlsian justice provide a guiding philosophy for the NHS and other socialized health services? |
4 |
| A conception of genetic parenthood |
4 |
| Should human germ line editing be allowed? Some suggestions on the basis of the existing regulatory framework |
4 |
| Refining the ethics of preimplantation genetic diagnosis: A plea for contextualized proportionality |
4 |
| How palliative care patients' feelings of being a burden to others can motivate a wish to die. Moral challenges in clinics and families |
4 |
| Relationships and burden: An empirical-ethical investigation of lived experience in home nursing arrangements |
4 |
| The role of trust in global health research collaborations |
4 |
| Feeling like a burden to others and the wish to hasten death in patients with advanced illness: A systematic review |
3 |
| The role of data custodians in establishing and maintaining social licence for health research |
3 |
| Language barriers and epistemic injustice in healthcare settings |
3 |
| Developing a 'moral compass tool' based on moral case deliberations: A pragmatic hermeneutic approach to clinical ethics |
3 |
| Cutting red tape to manage public health threats: An ethical dilemma of expediting antibiotic drug innovation |
3 |
| Genetic parenthood and causation: An objection to Douglas and Devolder's modified direct proportionate genetic descent account |
3 |
| Indignity and Old Age |
3 |
| No conscientious objection without normative justification: Against conscientious objection in medicine |
3 |
| Transcranial electrical stimulation for human enhancement and the risk of inequality: Prohibition or compensation? |
3 |
| Self-admission in psychiatry: The ethics |
3 |
| Parents' posthumous use of daughter's ovarian tissue: Ethical dimensions |
3 |
| Is infertility a disease and does it matter? |
3 |
| Erosion of informed consent in US research |
3 |
| Vaccine mandates, value pluralism, and policy diversity |
3 |
| Ectogenesis and a right to the death of the prenatal human being: A reply to Rasanen |
3 |
| The ethics of public policy RCTs: The principle of policy equipoise |
3 |
| Autism, theory of mind, and the reactive attitudes |
3 |
| Medical Innovation in a Children's Hospital: Diseases desperate grown by desperate appliance are relieved, or not at all' |
3 |
| Toward a global geroethics - gerontology and the theory of the good human life |
2 |
| Conscientious objection and compromising the patient: Response to Hughes |
2 |
| Reconsidering paternalism in clinical research |
2 |