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Health Ethics Podcast

The Health Ethics Podcast (formerly The COVID Ethics Series Podcast) relies on the idea that challenging ethical issues are best addressed by many folks, from diverse backgrounds, practically reasoning together. Each week Professor Bryan Pilkington is joined by leading experts from medicine, nursing, and the health sciences, as well as political theorists, economists, ethicists, philosophers and lawyers for a conversation about ethical issues.

  1. 53

    First, Organize: Physicians, Public Health, and the Power of Collective Action

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Jonathan Shaffer, who argues that physicians’ responsibilities extend beyond individual patient care to confronting harmful misinformation, inequitable systems, and political forces that shape health outcomes. Drawing on sociology, social movement theory, and a materialist critique of bioethics, Shaffer contends that medical professionals cannot effectively address these challenges alone and should instead engage in collective organizing to protect public health and influence policy.Guest:Jonathan Shaffer, PhDAssistant Professor of Sociology University of VermontHost:Bryan Pilkington, PhDProfessor of Bioethics Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine

  2. 52

    Beyond “Checkbox” Ethics: What Really Matters in Global Research

    Link to Show NotesGuest: Joseph Ali, JDAssociate Director for Global Programs, Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics & Associate Professor, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthHost: Bryan Pilkington, PhDProfessor of Bioethics, Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine

  3. 51

    Beyond Snapshots: Studying Medical Training Through Time

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Dorene Balmer about her book, The Long Arc of Training: Six Stories of Aspiring Doctors, which emerged from a 12-year longitudinal qualitative study that followed medical students into residency and practice. Balmer reflects on how repeated, relationship-based interviews allow participants to reflect on their evolving identities as physicians and surgeons, their career options and their personal values in ways that traditional “snapshot” research cannot capture.Guest: Dorene Balmer, PhDProfessor of PediatricsPerelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania&Education ScientistEducation Collaboratory, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

  4. 50

    Artificial Intelligence & the Social Role of Medicine Redefined

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. John Lantos about how artificial intelligence is reshaping medicine, particularly the doctor–patient relationship. He situates current concerns within a broader historical pattern of technological disruption in medicine, emphasizing that the true value of physicians lies not just in knowledge, but in navigating uncertainty and building trust with patients. He argues that AI will not make doctors obsolete but will redefine their role toward being interpreters of technology and stewards of patient-centered care.Guest: John D. Lantos, MDJDL Bioethics ConsultingArticle discussed:Lantos JD. The Lost Aura of the Physician in the Age of Artificial Intelligence. JAMA. 2026 Apr 7;335(13):1119-1121. doi: 10.1001/jama.2026.0946. PMID: 41770545.

  5. 49

    Asking for Aid: ICE, Advocacy, and Bioethics

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Arthur Caplan on his effort to urge the American and International Red Cross to investigate alleged human rights and healthcare abuses in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention facilities. Caplan describes reports of unsafe, prison-like conditions, arguing that these conditions warrant independent inspection under international humanitarian norms. He emphasizes that bioethicists have a special responsibility to speak out because many of the violations directly involve health, basic care, and the rights of vulnerable populations, especially children.Read the open letter here:Caplan, Arthur L. “An Open Letter to the American Red Cross and the International Red Cross: Calling for Immediate Humanitarian Visits to ICE Internment Facilities in Texas,” published March 16, 2026 in Bioethics Today, the website for the American Journal of Bioethics. https://tinyurl.com/openletterRedCrossGuest:Dr. Arthur Caplan is the Drs. William F. and Virginia Connolly Mitty Professor of Bioethics, Department of Population Health, NYU Grossman School of Medicine.

  6. 48

    Vaccines now: Politicians, science, and a new public health reality

    A discussion on recent changes in U.S. vaccine policy, the impact on pediatric practice, and the ethical challenges created by shifting public health communication.Guests:Aviva Schein, MD, Pediatrician, Zufall HealthJ. Patrick Bardill, PhD, Assistant Professor & Microbiologist, Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine

  7. 47

    Why Accreditation Matters: Safeguarding Quality in Medical Education

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Veronica Catanese about accreditation in medical education and its role in ensuring quality standards for MD programs. They also discuss how recent legislative challenges have affected accreditation Element 3.3 (diversity programs and partnerships).Veronica Catanese, MD, is Senior Director of Accreditation Services at the Association of American Medical Colleges.

  8. 46

    Art & the opposing viewpoint: Towards logical reasoning and civil discourse

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Kaitlin Puccio, JD, MS about how discussion of current emotionally-charged social issues can benefit from logical reasoning and respectful dialogue with opposing viewpoints. The use of art as a way to make bioethical issues accessible to the public and foster civil discourse is also discussed.Kaitlin Puccio, JD, MS is Director, Art and Bioethics Initiative at the UNESCO Chair in Bioethics and Human Rights & Adjunct Professor of Law at Fordham Law. https://kaitlinpuccio.com/

  9. 45

    Academic Chutes and Ladders: Differential Attainment in Medical Education

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Gabrielle Finn on differential attainment, which refers to the variation in academic attainment between groups of students who share protected characteristics (such as religion, ethnicity and ability) and those who do not share the same characteristic.Report discussed:Gabrielle Finn, Jenny Twyford, Adam Danquah, Asieh Shomali. The Game of Academic Privilege: An Exploration of Differential Attainment at the University of Manchester. 2025. https://documents.manchester.ac.uk/display.aspx?DocID=76069

  10. 44

    Healthcare Sustainability: Aligning Health and Environmental Ethics

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Kyle Tafuri, a healthcare sustainability expert, about the importance of aligning environmental sustainability with the mission of healthcare systems. Tafuri emphasizes that clean air, water, and healthy soil are fundamental to health and that healthcare institutions, as major employers and resource users, have both an ethical obligation and strategic opportunity to lead in sustainability.Kyle Tafuri is Vice President of Sustainability, Hackensack Meridian Health.

  11. 43

    Beyond the Exam Room: Physicians as Advocates

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Lawrence Rosen about how advocacy extends beyond individual patient care to include public health, policy reform, and environmental sustainability. Rosen argues that physicians have an ethical obligation to use their trusted position to defend and promote health at all levels.Lawrence Rosen, MD is an Integrative Pediatrician and Founder of The Whole Child Center & Associate Professor at Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine.

  12. 42

    Does science have a PR Problem? Information, Misinformation, and the Politics of Medicine

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Arthur Caplan about on the evolution of bioethics from an academic niche to a more public-facing discipline that now must address misinformation and political polarization.Dr. Arthur Caplan is the Drs. William F. and Virginia Connolly Mitty Professor and founding head of the Division of Medical Ethics, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, Department of Population Health.

  13. 41

    The Bioethics of "Baby Boxes"

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Lori Bruce on the ethical concerns surrounding baby boxes—devices used for the anonymous surrender of infants under Safe Haven laws. While good intentioned, Bruce argues these boxes lack regulation, informed consent, and support for vulnerable mothers. Evidence-based alternatives like confidential births and crisis counseling to better support families are discussed.Dr. Lori Bruce is Associate Director, Center for Bioethics, at the Yale School of Medicine.Episode Resources:Summer bioethics program:https://bioethics.yale.edu/summerArticle about supported/confidential birth:https://bioethicstoday.org/blog/the-us-needs-confidential-birth/Open letter to HHS about box regulations:https://docs.google.com/document/d/1XDZMxjLSZPDUdOKT1yWHAf_e8vxW1QayxSgX3auANGE/Token: Handmade paper and textile heart [Foundling Museum]https://foundlingmuseum.org.uk/object/token-handmade-paper-and-textile-heart/

  14. 40

    The Canary in the Coal Mine: Infectious Disease, Vaccine Hesitancy, and What We Owe Each Other

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Jeffrey Boscamp about the decline in public trust in science, particularly around vaccines, and notes that this erosion affects not only individual health decisions but also community well-being.

  15. 39

    Neurodiversity: What it is and What Happens Now

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Nanette Elster, JD, MPH and Kayhan Parsi, JD, PhD about the need for both legal and societal frameworks to ensure the rights and well-being of neurodivergent individuals.

  16. 38

    The Ongoing U.S. Struggle with Maternal Mortality

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington talks to Dr. James O’Brien about his co-authored article in American Journal of Perinatology.O'Brien JA, Lewkowitz AK, Main EK, Adashi EY. The Ongoing U.S. Struggle with Maternal Mortality. Am J Perinatol. Published online October 10, 2024. doi:10.1055/a-2404-8035

  17. 37

    Care of the Whole Person: The role of Hospital Chaplains

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington talks to Dr. Robert Klitzman  about his book, Doctor, Will You Pray for Me?: Medicine, Chaplains, and Healing the Whole Person. Robert Klitzman, MD, is a Professor of Psychiatry in the Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons and the Joseph Mailman School of Public Health, and the Director of the Masters of Bioethics Program at Columbia University. He has authored or co-authored over 180 scientific articles, and nine books, including When Doctors Become Parents, and has received several awards, including fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation. He is a Distinguished Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association and has been a member of the Empire State Stem Cell Commission, and the Research Ethics Advisory Panel of the U.S. Department of Defense.

  18. 36

    Am I My Students’ Nurse?

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington talks to Dr. Paul Snelling, Principal Lecturer in Adult Nursing at University of Worcester, about his 2024 Nursing Ethics article, “Am I my students’ nurse? Reflections on the nursing ethics of nursing education,” which explores the student–nurse academic relationship vis-à-vis the patient–nurse relationship.Snelling P. Am I my students’ nurse? Reflections on the nursing ethics of nursing education. Nursing Ethics. 2024;31(1):52-64. doi:10.1177/09697330231193858

  19. 35

    A Matter of Trust (with Guest Dr. Thomas Nasca)

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington talks to Dr. Thomas Nasca, ACGME President and Chief Executive Officer, about the crucial role of trust in medicine, emphasizing its importance in medical education, the physician-patient relationship, and addressing systemic issues in healthcare, such as burnout and moral distress. Without trust, the healthcare system risks failing both its providers and patients.

  20. 34

    The Bioethics of Environmental Injustice

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington talks to Dr. Keisha Ray about her 2024 co-authored American Journal of Bioethics article, “The Bioethics of Environmental Injustice: Ethical, Legal, and Clinical Implications of Unhealthy Environments” and her book, Black Health: The Social, Political, and Cultural Determinants of Black People’s Health.Keisha Ray is an Associate Professor of bioethics and medical humanities at McGovern Medical School in Houston, Texas. Her research focuses on the socio-political determinants of Black people's health and exposing structural racism's effects on Black people's health and wellbeing.

  21. 33

    The Occasional Human Sacrifice: A Conversation with Carl Elliott

    In this episdoe, Bryan Pilkington, PhD speaks to Carl Elliott, MD, PhD, professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Minnesota. His latest book, The Occasional Human Sacrifice: Medical Experimentation and the Price of Saying No, is out now (W. W. Norton & Company, 2024). The Occassional Human Sacrifice details shocking cases of abusive medical research and the whistleblowers who spoke out against them, sometimes at the expense of their careers.Carl Elliott's website: https://www.carl-elliott.com/

  22. 32

    How Will This Benefit Patients? AI Integration into Clinical Decision Making

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Charles E. Binkley, MD.Charles Binkley is a liver and pancreas surgeon, bioethicist, Director of Bioethics at Hackensack Meridian Health, and Associate Professor of Surgery at Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine. His work focuses on the ethical use of AI to improve clinical decision making.He is the co-author of Encoding Bioethics: AI in Clinical Decision-Making (University of California Press, 2024) with Tyler Loftus. 

  23. 31

    Spheres of Morality: The Ethical Codes of the Medical Profession

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks to Dr. Samuel Doernberg and Dr. Robert Truog about their recent paper in the American Journal of Bioethics entitled, "Spheres of Morality: The Ethical Codes of the Medical Profession." 

  24. 30

    Academic Freedom in Medicine: Ethics and the Training of Sovereign Professionals

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks to Dr. David J. Skorton about academic freedom.David J. Skorton, MD, is president and CEO of the AAMC (Association of American Medical Colleges), a not-for-profit association that represents medical schools, teaching hospitals and health systems, and academic societies.

  25. 29

    Do healthcare institutions have a conscience?

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks to Dr. Jason Adam Wasserman about Institutional Conscience. His new article is:Wasserman JA, Brummett AL, Navin MC, Menkes DL. Conscientious Objection to Aggressive Interventions for Patients in a Vegetative State. Am J Bioeth. Published online November 30, 2023. doi:10.1080/15265161.2023.2280099. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38032547/Dr. Wasserman is Professor of Foundational Medical Studies at Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine, where he also holds an appointment in Pediatrics, is the course director for the Medical Humanities and Clinical Bioethics curriculum, serves as the Founding Director of the Center for Moral Values in Health and Medicine, the Director of the Holocaust and Medicine program, and as a clinical ethics consultant at Corewell Health William Beaumont University Hospital. His first book, At Home on the Street (Lynne Rienner Publishers 2010) addressed the issue of homelessness, while his current scholarly work focuses on clinical bioethics and medicine and the Holocaust.  The second edition of his book Social and Behavioral Science for Health Professionals (with Brian Hinote) was published in 2020 by Rowman and Littlefield.  He has authored numerous articles in journals such as Social Science and Medicine, Qualitative Health Research, Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, American Journal of Bioethics, Hastings Center Report, Mayo Clinic Proceedings, Pediatrics, JAMA-Pediatrics, and The New England Journal of Medicine.

  26. 28

    Societal Informed Consent in the Age of AI

    If we demand informed consent for individuals, why don't we demand it for all of society? In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks to Dr. Brian Patrick Green about technology and societal informed consent. Brian Patrick Green is the director of technology ethics at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara University and teaches AI ethics in Santa Clara University’s Graduate School of Engineering. His work focuses on AI and ethics, technology ethics in corporations, the ethics of space exploration and use, the ethics of technological manipulation of humans, the ethics of mitigation of and adaptation towards risky emerging technologies, and various aspects of the impact of technology and engineering on human life and society, including the relationship of technology and religion (particularly the Catholic Church). Green is the author of the book Space Ethics and co-author of Ethics in the Age of Disruptive Technologies: An Operational Roadmap.

  27. 27

    "Trust Me, I'm a Clinician": Medical Expertise, Trust, and the Patient Experience

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks to Dr. Jamie Carlin Watson, clinical ethicist for the Cleveland Clinic Center for Bioethics. Watson is the author of several books, including: A History and Philosophy of Expertise: The Nature and Limits of Authority (Bloomsbury, 2022), Expertise: A Philosophical Introduction (Bloomsbury 2020), and Moral Expertise: New Essays from Theoretical and Clinical Bioethics, edited with Laura K. Guidry-Grimes (Springer, 2018). https://jamiecarlinwatson.weebly.com/

  28. 26

    Health Equity is the Goal, Health Justice is the Path

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks to Dr. Philip Alberti, Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) senior director of health equity research and policy, and founding director of the Center for Health Justice. Dr. Alberti's work is fueled by the belief that solutions to health injustice exist within communities themselves, and that the path to better health goes beyond medical care to working alongside partners across multiple sectors that impact our everyday lives. Dr. Alberti's most recent publication is "A Population Health Impact Pyramid for Health Care" (Milbank Quarterly, 2023 Apr;101(S1):770-794.)

  29. 25

    A Sociologist and a Philosopher Talk Medical Education

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks to Dr. Frederic W. Hafferty, professor of medical education at the Mayo Clinic, in Rochester, Minnesota. He is the author of “Into the Valley: Death and the Socialization of Medical Students” (Yale University Press); “The Changing Medical Profession: An International Perspective” (Oxford University Press), with John McKinlay; “Sociology and Complexity Science: A New Field of Inquiry” (Springer) with Brian Castellani, “The Hidden Curriculum in Health Professions Education” (Dartmouth College Press) with Joseph O’Donnell, “Understanding Professionalism” (Lange) with Wendy Levinson, Katherine Lucy, and Shiphra Ginsburg and “Place and Health as Complex Systems: A Case study and Empirical Test “ (Springer) with Brian Castellani, Rajeev Rajaram, J. Galen Buckwalter and Michael Ball.

  30. 24

    The Philosophy of Disability: Equity, Justice and Health

    In this episode of the COVID Ethics Series Podcast, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Joel Reynolds, Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Disability Studies at Georgetown University, Senior Research Scholar in the Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Senior Bioethics Advisor to and Fellow of The Hastings Center, and Faculty Scholar of The Greenwall Foundation. Dr. Reynolds is especially concerned with the meaning of disability, the issue of ableism, and how philosophical inquiry into each might improve the lives of disabled people and the justness of practices in medicine, science, politics, and law.Joel Reynolds can be found at https://joelreynolds.me/Works mentioned:Binkley, C. E., Reynolds, J. M., & Shuman, A. (2022). From the Eyeball Test to the Algorithm - Quality of Life, Disability Status, and Clinical Decision Making in Surgery. The New England journal of medicine, 387(14), 1325–1328. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMms2207408Reynolds, J. M. Three Things Clinicians Should Know About Disability. AMA J Ethics. 2018;20(12):E1181-1187. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2018.1181Reynolds, J. M., & Wieseler, C. (Eds.). (2022). The Disability Bioethics Reader. Taylor & Francis Group.Reynolds, J. M. (2022). The life worth living: disability, pain, and morality. U of Minnesota Press.

  31. 23

    Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Clinical Decision Making: A Surgeon's perspective

    In this episode of the COVID Ethics Series Podcast, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Charles Binkley, M.D., FACS, HEC-C, the director of Bioethics for the health network’s Central Region, and also an associate professor of Surgery at the Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine on his recent New England Journal of Medicine paper, “From the Eyeball Test to the Algorithm – Quality of Life, Disability Status, and Clinical Decision Making in Surgery,” which contends that more data and an empirical framework involving algorithms would aid doctors, who must seek out more input than just their sole observation of the patient in deciding whether a surgical intervention is “worth it.”1. Binkley CE, Reynolds JM, Shuman A. From the Eyeball Test to the Algorithm — Quality of Life, Disability Status, and Clinical Decision Making in Surgery. New England Journal of Medicine. 2022;387(14):1325-1328. doi:10.1056/NEJMms2207408

  32. 22

    How We Could End the Pandemic

    In this episode of the COVID Ethics Series Podcast, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Eli Adashi. Dr. Adashi served as the Fifth Dean of Medicine and Biological Sciences at Brown University, and is presently a tenured Professor of Medical Science with the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University. Since 2008, Adashi has undertaken to focus on matters of policy at the nexus of medicine, law, ethics, and social justice.

  33. 21

    Physicians' Stress & Burnout During the COVID-19 Pandemic

    In this episode of the COVID Ethics Series Podcast, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks to bioethicist, Dr. Nancy Berlinger. Berlinger is a Research Scholar at The Hastings Center, an independent bioethics research institute based in Garrison, NY. Her current research focuses on ethical and societal challenges arising from population aging; the bioethics of migration, and responding to and learning from the Covid-19 pandemic.

  34. 20

    Universal Healthcare: On Human Dignity, Global Co-Operation, and Financial Sustainability

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Rui Nunes, professor of bioethics at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Porto. Professor Nunes is also the president and founder of the Portuguese Association of Bioethics and is a member of the Portuguese National Council of Ethics for Life Sciences. His most recent book is "Healthcare as a Universal Human Right: Sustainability in Global Health" (Taylor & Francis, 2022).

  35. 19

    COVID's "politicization tragedy" and physician obligations to public health

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Scott Schweikart, JD, MBE, Senior Research Associate at the American Medical Association and legal editor of the AMA's Journal of Ethics. They discuss AMA's COVID-19 Ethics Guidance website (https://www.ama-assn.org/topics/covid-19-ethics-guidance) in addition to issues surrounding vaccine hesitancy, physicians as models of good health behavior, and our society's current distrust of science and medicine.

  36. 18

    Conscience, Vaccines, and the Obligations of Community

    In Conscience, Vaccines, and the Obligations of Community, a panel of experts discusses respect for individual conscience and decision making and how to balance this with the health needs of communities. Considerations of conscientious objection, vaccine hesitancy, and the role of philosophical and religious concerns in requesting exemptions are to be discussed.Recorded on February 10, 2022.Panelists:-Jason T. Eberl, PhD, Director; Professor, Albert Gnaegi Center for Health Care Ethics, Saint Louis University-Paul Cummins, PhD, Research Assistant Professor, Bioethics Clarkson University-Kirk Johnson, MDiv, DMH, Assistant Professor, Justice Studies Montclair State University

  37. 17

    Listening Beyond the Obvious: Delivering Better Care with Narrative Medicine

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Cindy Smalletz on her work in narrative medicine, and how narrative medicine has impacted her practice of Occupational Therapy.Cindy Smalletz, MS, MS, MA is Program Director for the Division of Narrative Medicine in the Department of Medical Humanities and Ethics at the Columbia University Irving Medical Center. Most recently, she completed an MS in Occupational Therapy and plans to further bring together narrative medicine with clinical care, burnout prevention, and education, with the hopes of changing healthcare around the world through improving advocacy, education, communication and action.Learn more about the narrative medicine events discussed in this podcast episode at https://narrativemedicine.blog/.

  38. 16

    Telling the Stories Behind COVID: Narrative & Graphic Medicine

    As COVID-19 continues to affect communities across the globe, we turn to the stories and depictions – narrative and graphic – behind COVID with the hope of gaining a better understanding of its impact and how we may move forward ethically. Prof. Bryan Pilkington speaks with a multi-disciplinary panel of experts about narrative and graphic medicine in the time of COVID.Panelists:Cindy Smalletz, MS, OTR/L, Program Director, Division of Narrative Medicine, Columbia University Irving Medical CenterMatthew Noe, MLIS, Lead Collection & Knowledge Management Librarian, Countway Library, Harvard Medical SchoolAllison Zuckerberg, Medical Student, Hackensack Meridian School of MedicineRecorded on November 17, 2021.

  39. 15

    Systemic Racism and COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Kirk A Johnson on the impact COVID has had on American understanding of systemic racism, as well as the factors that influence vaccine hesitancy and mistrust in people of color. Dr. Kirk A Johnson a Professor at Montclair State University who teaches courses in Justice Studies, Medical Humanities, Bioethics, Global Issues, and Religion. He received his Masters of Divinity (MDiv) from Drew Theological School and his Doctorate in Medical Humanities (DMH) from Drew University. His recent books are "The Anti-Racism Resource Guide Volume One: Supporting Black Businesses and Economics" (Peculiar Capital, 2020) and “Medical Stigmata: Race, Medicine, and the Pursuit of Theological Liberation” (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018).This episode was recorded on 8/30/2021.

  40. 14

    Bioethics & the Reprocessing and Reuse of Medical Equipment

    The questions relating to medical equipment disposal and decommissioning are many and varied. In this episode, host Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Jennifer Orth about her work as the lead of Re-MERGE, Reprocessing Medical Equipment: Rotarian Research Group for the Environment, through the International Rotary Fellowship of Healthcare Professionals. Jennifer is a Biochemistry and Philosophy double major in Seton Hall University's pre-medical program with a strong interest in bioethics and the medical humanities.

  41. 13

    Long-Term Care, Nursing, and COVID-19 Safety

    In this episode, Host Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks to Dr. Sherry Greenberg, Associate Professor at Seton Hall University College of Nursing and nurse practitioner faculty consultant on the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s Age-Friendly Health Systems Action Community initiative.

  42. 12

    Protecting Mother and Child: COVID19 and Pregnancy

    Dr. Bryan Pilkington in conversation with Mark Fuller Sewell, MD, a specialty care physician board certified in maternal-fetal medicine and obstetrics and gynecology.

  43. 11

    Doing What They've Trained to Do: Medical Student Responses to COVID

    Featuring Emma Goldberg, author of "Life on the Line: Young Doctors Come of Age in a Pandemic" and writer for The New York Times; Nick Cozzarelli, medical student at Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine; and Alex Tannenbaum, medical student at University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.

  44. 10

    Vulnerable Patients Need Strong Advocates

    COVID Ethics Series Podcast host Dr. Bryan Pilkington sits down with Dr. Maryanne Giuliante, Advanced Practice Provider Manager for Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center’s Westchester Regional Network in West Harrison, NY, and a triple board certified as a bioethicist, an Adult Nurse Practitioner, and an Advanced Nurse Executive. In this episode, Dr. Giuliante speaks of her experience as a COVID patient during the early days of the pandemic and addresses bioethical questions, such as vaccine hesitancy, through her experience as COVID patient, healthcare provider, and bioethicist.

  45. 9

    Social UNdistancing & the Duty to Protect One's Neighbor

    Host Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks to Father Colin Kay, Vice President for Mission and Ministry at Seton Hall University, on the concept of "Social UNdistancing," spirituality and community health during COVID, religious exemptions, and more.

  46. 8

    Expertise in the Time of COVID: Who has it? Who should have it?

    In Expertise in the Time of COVID: Who has it? Who should have it?, a panel of experts discusses the roles that authority, information literacy, and reasoning in situations of uncertainty have in responding ethically to a pandemic. In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with a multi-disciplinary panel about the importance of expertise and how it has played out in the time of COVID. Panelists, including Chelsea Barrett (Seton Hall Libraries), Jennifer Oliva (Seton Hall University Law School), Kayhan Parsi (Loyola University), and Peter Wicks (Elm Institute), will discuss the role of expertise from their disciplines.Panelists:Chelsea Barrett, MBA, MI - Seton Hall University LibrariesJennifer Oliva, JD - Seton Hall LawKayhan Parsi, JD, PhD - Loyola University, ChicagoPeter Wicks, PhD - Elm Institutehttps://library.shu.edu/COVIDEthics/expertise

  47. 7

    On Lonely Deaths: COVID, Community, & the Lost Art of Dying Well

    On Lonely Deaths: COVID, Community, & the Lost Art of Dying Well with Dr. Lydia Dugdale was recorded live on Thursday, April 29. The event's co-sponsors were the Center for Catholic Studies, the IHS Library, with IHS Bioethics. The event was moderated by Dr. Bryan Pilkington.Lydia Dugdale, MD, MAR (ethics), is the Dorothy L. and Daniel H. Silberberg Associate Professor of Medicine at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons and Director of the Center for Clinical Medical Ethics. She also serves as Associate Director of Clinical Ethics at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Irving Medical Center. She is author of The Lost Art of Dying (HarperOne, 2020), on the preparation for death.

  48. 6

    Contact Tracing and the Public's Health

    In this episode of the COVID Ethics Series Podcast, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Denice Ochola, MPH, a Contact Tracer with NYC Health + Hospitals.

  49. 5

    It isn't COVID that's racist: Inequities in healthcare in the time of COVID-19

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington speaks with Dr. Tade Ayeni, the Director of Diversity and Equity at Hackensack School of Medicine.

  50. 4

    COVID-19 Challenge Trials

    In this episode, Dr. Bryan Pilkington discusses ethical issues associated with COVID-19 challenge trials with Seton Hall Law Professor Carl Coleman.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

The Health Ethics Podcast (formerly The COVID Ethics Series Podcast) relies on the idea that challenging ethical issues are best addressed by many folks, from diverse backgrounds, practically reasoning together. Each week Professor Bryan Pilkington is joined by leading experts from medicine, nursing, and the health sciences, as well as political theorists, economists, ethicists, philosophers and lawyers for a conversation about ethical issues.

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Bryan Pilkington

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Health Ethics Podcast currently has 50 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

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The Health Ethics Podcast (formerly The COVID Ethics Series Podcast) relies on the idea that challenging ethical issues are best addressed by many folks, from diverse backgrounds, practically reasoning together. Each week Professor Bryan Pilkington is joined by leading experts from medicine,...

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Health Ethics Podcast has 50 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

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Health Ethics Podcast is created and hosted by Bryan Pilkington.
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