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DTSTART:20210314T070000
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DTSTART:20211107T060000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211206T070000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211206T113000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000817
CREATED:20211130T215249Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211130T215249Z
UID:10000069-1638774000-1638790200@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:WHO Pandemic Ethics & Policy Summit
DESCRIPTION:Equitable access\, solidarity\, and global health justice: Bridging the gap between ethics and decision-making in pandemics \nFrom resource allocation and priority-setting\, access to vaccines\, vaccine mandates\, lockdowns\, travel restrictions\, public health surveillance\, and obligations to conduct clinical trials\, the COVID-19 pandemic has raised profound ethical challenges on an unprecedented global scale. \nAt the same time\, and also in an unprecedented manner\, ethical values like equity\, fairness\, solidarity\, and trust have figured prominently in global political discussions. Despite an abundance of guidance\,  the question remains: how much progress\, if any\, have we made in achieving these values\, in advancing towards global health justice? Much has been said about the importance of evidence-informed decision-making\, but what have we achieved in terms of ‘Ethics-informed decision-making’? This Summit provides a forum to discuss the translation of ethics into policy making in COVID-19; where we have succeeded and failed; what are the major challenges and what steps need to be taken to improve ethics informed public health decision-making for pandemic preparedness and response. \nThe Summit is organized by the WHO Heath Ethics and Governance Unit in collaboration with the WHO’s Working Group on Ethics & COVID-19 and the ACT-Accelerator Ethics & Governance Working Group. \nConfirmed speakers include: Thalia Arawi\, Caesar Atuire\, Alena Buyx\, Ezekiel Emanuel\, Ruth Faden\, Anthony Fauci\, Christine Grady\, Fatima Hassan\, Sharon Kaur\, Ilona Kickbusch\, Florencia Luna\, Roli Mathur\, Peter Singer\, Jerome Singh\, Soumya Swaminathan\, Beatriz Thomé\, Ross Upshur\, Effy Vayena.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/who-pandemic-ethics-policy-summit/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:WHO
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211201T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211201T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000817
CREATED:20211126T194642Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211126T194743Z
UID:10000068-1638374400-1638378000@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Specialists vs Generalists: Finding Common Knowledge Among Reasonable Physicians in Malpractice Trials
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: \nPatrick Garon-Sayegh\, SJD candidate\, Faculty of Law\, University of Toronto \nAbout this Seminar: \nThe legal standard for medical malpractice tells us very little on its own. To make a specific malpractice claim\, the legal standard must be suffused with a case’s particulars and the opinion of medical experts. Thus\, medical experts are often the key to malpractice claims. Without them\, it is in most cases impossible to know whether or not a given medical action constituted malpractice. \nThis presentation explores a fundamental question: When is a physician properly qualified to critique another physician’s work\, for the purposes of determining whether or not malpractice occurred? The presentation will draw on case law and malpractice trial transcripts to show how this question can raise heterogenous arguments\, among which formal credentials play only a small part. \nThe presentation will contribute to the goal of the Bioethics Seminar Series by fostering interdisciplinary discussion on issues related to expertise—who can claim it\, against whom\, and when. These issues are central to healthcare. Indeed\, physicians\, nurses\, bioethicists\, etc.\, are all “experts” of some kind\, and routinely claim epistemic authority over others as a result. This raises serious ethical and political questions\, especially since COVID-19\, which has spurned pushback against expert authority on a remarkable scale. \nAdditional Details: \nThis event is free and is open to the general public. \nThe direct link to the seminar will be sent out to registered participants 2 hours before the event. The JCB Bioethics Seminars are now being live-streamed to our YouTube channel. If you don’t receive the link 2 hours before the event\, please head over there and click on the live stream. Subscribe to our channel to receive notices of upcoming events. \nQuestions? \nPlease email Laurie Bulchak\, laurie.bulchak@utoronto.ca.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/finding-common-knowledge-among-reasonable-physicians-in-malpractice-trials/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Book Launch,JCB Bioethics Seminar Series
ORGANIZER;CN="Joint Centre for Bioethics":MAILTO:jcb.ea@utoronto.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211123T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211123T133000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000817
CREATED:20211026T213121Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211111T163431Z
UID:10000063-1637668800-1637674200@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Health AI Ethics and Governance: The WHO Guidance\, Can It Make a Difference?
DESCRIPTION:In this lecture Effy Vayena (Professor of Bioethics\, ETH Zurich) will discuss the recently released guidance by the World Health Organization (WHO) on the ethics and governance of Health AI. The guidance is an attempt to move global governance efforts forward. With this as her starting point\, she will aim to contextualize the report in the current scholarly and political discourse of AI ethics more broadly; highlight its key messages along with some of its specific recommendations. In the last part of the talk she will focus on obstacles and potential enablers that are likely to determine the impact of this guidance. \nWe will also hear responses from additional panelists\, and this event registration page will be updated when those names are confirmed. Please check back. \nThis lecture will be followed by audience questions and discussion. \nRegistration is free and open to the public. The YouTube link will be sent out to registrants 2 hours before the event. \nThis event is part of the Lecture Series on Ethics and Governance of AI for Health organized by the University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics in partnership with The Women’s College Hospital Institute for Health System Solutions and Virtual Care (WIHV) and with support from AMS Healthcare.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/health-ai-ethics-and-governance-the-who-guidance-can-it-make-a-difference/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Lecture Series on Ethics and Governance of AI for Health
ORGANIZER;CN="Joint Centre for Bioethics":MAILTO:jcb.ea@utoronto.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211117T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211117T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000818
CREATED:20211027T224542Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211027T224542Z
UID:10000066-1637164800-1637168400@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Research or Not Research? This Is Not the Question for Public Health Emergencies
DESCRIPTION:Speaker:\nGhaiath Hussein\, Assistant Professor\, Medical Ethics and Law\, Trinity College Dublin\, Ireland \nAbout this Seminar:\nPublic health emergencies\, whether natural or man-made\, local or global\, in peacetime or during armed conflicts are always associated with the need to collect data (and sometimes biological samples) about and from those affected by these emergencies. One of the central questions in the relevant literature is whether the activities that involve the collection of data and/or biological samples are considered ‘research’\, with the subsequent endeavour to define what ‘research’ is and whether they should be submitted for ethical approval or not. In this seminar\, I will argue that this is not the central question when it comes to research/public health/humanitarian ethics. Using the findings of a systematic review on the research conducted in Darfur and findings from a qualitative project that aimed at defining what constitutes ‘research’ in public health emergencies I will\, alternatively\, present what I refer to as the ‘ethical characterization’ of these research-like activities and how they can be ethically guided.  \nAdditional Details:\nThis event is free and is open to the general public. \nThe direct link to the seminar will be sent out to registered participants 2 hours before the event. The JCB Bioethics Seminars are now being live-streamed to our YouTube channel. If you don’t receive the link 2 hours before the event\, please head over there and click on the live stream. Subscribe to our channel to receive notices of upcoming events.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/research-or-not-research-this-is-not-the-question-for-public-health-emergencies/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:JCB Bioethics Seminar Series
ORGANIZER;CN="Joint Centre for Bioethics":MAILTO:jcb.ea@utoronto.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211111T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211111T130000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000818
CREATED:20211026T213755Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211026T233428Z
UID:10000064-1636632000-1636635600@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Moral Distress in Health Care: What the COVID-19 Pandemic Has Taught Us
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Abi Sriharan\, D.Phil\, MSc (Oxon)\nProgram Director\, Systems Leadership and Innovation\nAssistant Professor\, Institute for Health Policy\, Management and Evaluation\nDalla Lana School of Public Health\, University of Toronto \nDescription:\nThis presentation will explore moral distress and burnout experienced by health professionals during COVID-19; lessons learned from research\, practical tools and relevant ethical issues will be explored. \nObjectives:\nExplore moral distress in the context of health care\n· Identify and discuss common triggers and enablers\n· Share lessons learned from practical experience. \nDr. Abi Sriharan is an internationally recognized academic with a wealth of experience in human resources and human capital strategy in the health sector. Dr. Sriharan leads the Systems Leadership and Innovation program at the Institute of Health Policy\, Management and Evaluation and teaches in the areas of health systems leadership\, innovation\, and transformation. \nPrior to joining the Institute of Health Policy\, Management\, and Evaluation\, she held senior leadership roles at medical schools hospitals in Canada and the USA and served as a consultant for multinational organizations such as World Health Organization\, World Federation of Neurology\, Middle East Hearing Association\, and the Canada International Scientific Exchange Program on issues of management\, engagement\, training and governance of the health workforce and health systems.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/moral-distress-in-health-care-what-the-covid-19-pandemic-has-taught-us/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Sinai Bioethics Grand Rounds
ORGANIZER;CN="Sinai Health Bioethics Department":MAILTO:rebecca.greenberg@sinaihealth.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211110T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211110T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000818
CREATED:20211103T230827Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211103T230827Z
UID:10000067-1636560000-1636563600@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:100 Years of Insulin: Medical Success\, Ethical Mess?
DESCRIPTION:Speakers:\nDr. Andrew Helmers\, MDCM\, MHSc (Bioethics)\, MSc\, Staff Physician\, Department of Critical Care Medicine & Department of Bioethics\, The Hospital for Sick Children\nRashad Rehman\, BA\, PhD Candidate\, Department of Philosophy & Joint Centre for Bioethics\, University of Toronto; Project-Specific Bioethics Research Volunteer\, Mount Sinai Hospital \nAbout this Seminar:\nInsulin’s discovery and discoverers are indebted in part to the absence of institutional research ethics processes in the first half of the 20th Century. In 1921\, Frederick Banting\, Charles Best\, and James Collip discovered and purified insulin in the laboratory of J.J.R. Macleod at The University of Toronto. They invoked self-experimentation\, in addition to extensive animal work (without oversight)\, in order to bring their discovery to the bedside with a remarkable rapidity: 14-year-old Leonard Thompson received the world’s first injection of insulin in January 1922\, at the Toronto General Hospital. This bench-to-bedside transition involved additional data-gathering from vulnerable patients and war veterans\, again without any oversight or documentation of informed consent. Their motives were admirable\, and their legacy (including the generous surrender of their patents) was generous and life-saving. Their methods would not pass muster at any contemporary research ethics board\, yet their altruism and energy in pursuing a treatment for Type 1 Diabetes was – and remains – exemplary. Banting and Best’s work serves as a reminder of the virtues and values which pre-dated a formalized research ethics enterprise\, values which must continue to inform modern research ethics such that patients are prioritized over patents. \nAdditional Details:\nThis event is free and is open to the general public. \nThe direct link to the seminar will be sent out to registered participants 2 hours before the event. The JCB Bioethics Seminars are now being live-streamed to our YouTube channel. If you don’t receive the link 2 hours before the event\, please head over there and click on the live stream. Subscribe to our channel to receive notices of upcoming events.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/100-years-of-insulin-medical-success-ethical-mess/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
ORGANIZER;CN="Joint Centre for Bioethics":MAILTO:jcb.ea@utoronto.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211103T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211103T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000818
CREATED:20211027T181651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211027T181651Z
UID:10000065-1635955200-1635958800@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Ethics and Values in Design: A Structured Review and Theoretical Critique
DESCRIPTION:Speakers:\nJoseph Donia\, PhD Candidate\, Institute of Health Policy\, Management and Evaluation\, University of Toronto\nJay Shaw\, Assistant Professor\, Department of Physical Therapy / Institute of Health Policy\, Management and Evaluation\, University of Toronto; Research Director of AI\, Ethics & Health\, University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics; Scientist\, Women’s College Hospital Institute for Health System Solutions and Virtual Care \nAbout this Seminar:\nA variety of approaches have appeared in academic literature and in design practice representing “ethics-first” methods. These approaches typically focus on clarifying the normative dimensions of design\, or outlining strategies for explicitly incorporating values into design. While this body of literature has developed considerably over the last two decades\, two themes central to the endeavour of ethics and values in design have not yet been systematically discussed in relation to each other: (a) designer agency\, and (b) the strength of normative claims informing the design process. This seminar will present the findings of a structured review of the research literature on these two themes\, and discuss their implications for research and practice of ethical AI design for health. \nAdditional Details:\nThis event is free and is open to the general public. \nThe direct link to the seminar will be sent out to registered participants 2 hours before the event. The JCB Bioethics Seminars are now being live-streamed to our YouTube channel. If you don’t receive the link 2 hours before the event\, please head over there and click on the live stream. Subscribe to our channel to receive notices of upcoming events.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/ethics-and-values-in-design-a-structured-review-and-theoretical-critique/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:JCB Bioethics Seminar Series
ORGANIZER;CN="Joint Centre for Bioethics":MAILTO:jcb.ea@utoronto.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211027T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211027T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000818
CREATED:20211026T212659Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211026T212810Z
UID:10000062-1635350400-1635354000@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Researching Surrogacy: The Ethics of Research Approaches to Gay Fatherhood
DESCRIPTION:This event is part of the Bioethics Seminar Series 2021-22. \nSpeaker:\nSophia Fantus\, PhD\, MSW\, Assistant Professor\, University of Texas at Arlington School of Social Work \nAbout this Seminar:\nThe visibility of same-sex parent families and the increased use of surrogacy worldwide have expanded LGBT parenting scholarship to include experiences of gay men. Yet\, even amid growing research on gay men’s parenting experiences\, such studies are still under-theorized. For the most part\, they remain mired in heteronormative frameworks and assumptions about parenting and surrogacy. The purpose of this presentation is to illustrate a family theory model to support ethical conduct of research with gay men pursuing surrogacy. This presentation will address multilevel supports and barriers in reproductive access and conclude with implications for scholars and research ethics board members. LGBT competencies can enable researchers to identify and challenge research designs and analytic approaches based on heteronormativity\, and to meaningfully explore and assess gay men’s unique procreative identities in the context of surrogacy. Cultivating LGBT and community-based research skills are necessary components of ethically sound research approaches to gay fatherhood. \nAdditional Details:\nThis event is free and is open to the general public. \nThe direct link to the seminar will be sent out to registered participants 2 hours before the event. The JCB Bioethics Seminars are now being live-streamed to our YouTube channel. If you don’t receive the link 2 hours before the event\, please head over there and click on the live stream. Subscribe to our channel to receive notices of upcoming events.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/researching-surrogacy-the-ethics-of-research-approaches-to-gay-fatherhood/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:JCB Bioethics Seminar Series
ORGANIZER;CN="Joint Centre for Bioethics":MAILTO:jcb.ea@utoronto.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211020T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211020T133000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000818
CREATED:20211014T184936Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211014T184937Z
UID:10000061-1634731200-1634736600@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:The Ethical Lessons from COVID-19: Past\, Present and Applying Them to the  Future of Cancer Care
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: \nArthur L. Caplan\, PhD\, Drs. William F. and Virginia Connolly Mitty Chair and Director\, Division of Medical Ethics\, NYU Grossman School of Medicine \nAbout the lecture: \n\n12:00 – Introduction and History of the Philippa Harris Lecture Series\n12:10 – Introduction of the Speaker\n12:15 – Speaker Presentation\n1:00 – Question and Answer Period\n\nEfforts to develop new drugs for the treatment and prevention of COVID-19 and make them available to patients as quickly as possible have been extraordinary in terms of increasing research funding\, fostering collaboration\, and regulatory flexibility. Patients facing other terrible diseases with unmet treatment needs have begun to ask why they have not been the beneficiaries of similar efforts. Where is their “Operation Warp Speed”? Why does FDA’s power to issue Emergency Use Authorizations not extend to their emergencies\, as their lives are threatened by conditions such as cancer with higher fatality rates than COVID-19? These are reasonable questions\, but the pandemic bears a unique combination of features\, including global impact\, widespread population risk\, a deep understanding of the viral target\, and pre-existing foundational scientific work\, all of which render the full strength of the COVID-19 response implausible for cancer and most other diseases. Although financial resources are important for scientific progress\, many diseases are not yet well-enough understood for the science to move at “warp speed.” Moreover\, science funding demands priority setting. Not every disease can be a funding priority. Nonetheless\, the response to the COVID-19 pandemic offers important lessons for non-pandemic diseases\, especially with regard to the importance of collaboration\, prioritizing the strongest research efforts within a given disease area\, adopting innovative trial designs\, sharing data\, and holding fast to randomized controlled designs that enable trials to produce meaningful answers as quickly as possible. While regulatory flexibility is critical to allowing patients with unmet needs to access investigational products\, another pandemic lesson is to be wary of the downsides of the Emergency Use Authorization pathway. Lower standards without adequate safeguards can result in safety concerns\, missed opportunities for treatment and research\, patient harm\, and delayed progress in securing the high-quality evidence needed to answer important clinical questions. \nThe Philippa Harris lecture was established by Mr. and Mrs. Bill and Pat Harris in 1981 to celebrate the life of their daughter\, Pippa\, who died from cancer at the age of twenty. The lecture is shared between the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre\, the UHN Bioethics Program\, and the University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics. \nThis event is free and is open to the general public. The YouTube live stream link to the lecture will be sent out to registered participants two hours before the event. \nQuestions? Please email Laurie Bulchak\, laurie.bulchak@utoronto.ca.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/the-ethical-lessons-from-covid-19-past-present-and-applying-them-to-the-future-of-cancer-care/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/40th-Philippa-Harris-Lecture-2021-Twitter.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Joint Centre for Bioethics":MAILTO:jcb.ea@utoronto.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210526
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210529
DTSTAMP:20260421T000818
CREATED:20210510T163318Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210510T163319Z
UID:10000060-1621987200-1622246399@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Behind the Mask: Ethical Issues Revealed by COVID-19 in Canada and Beyond
DESCRIPTION:About this year’s conference\nFollowing the feedback from CBS-SCB members and others who responded to our survey questions about the conference\, we are pleased to announce that the theme of the 2021 Canadian Bioethics Society Annual Conference will be “Behind the Mask: Ethical Issues Revealed by COVID-19 in Canada and Beyond.” \nThe virtual event will be held from 26-28 May with the daily schedule contained within a window of time that makes it possible to join from all over Canada during reasonable local hours.\nThe theme is intended to capture issues and concerns both created by and exacerbated by the pandemic. These may include the roots of social and health inequity that perpetuate racism and oppression\, the governmental responses to the pandemic\, and those issues that may be endemic to the field of bioethics itself. \nWe welcome submissions addressing a broad range of topics\, ranging from local to global\, individuals to populations\, theoretical to practical\, and from practice to policy. We also welcome discussions focusing on the next best steps for bioethics as a field of study\, inquiry and practice.   \nPlenary speakers\nWe would like to introduce you to our outstanding line-up of Canadian and International plenary speakers: \nOpening keynote (May 26) \nSharifah Sekalala\, Associate Professor\, School of Law\, University of Warwick\nCentering on our common humanity: Reflecting on human rights within the COVID-19 crisis \nThis keynote questions the utility of human rights within global health crises. In the past year\, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic\, States have taken unprecedented measures that infringe on civil\, political\, economic and social liberties. The effects of these measures have been very different for different groups both nationally but also globally. I will sketch out the potential of human rights in addressing public health crises\, but also draw attention to its limits. Moving from the norms and principles of human rights that are necessary in guiding government responses to the COVID-19 crisis\, I will attempt to rethink how human rights could create fairer societies beyond the crisis. \nPanel (May 27) on Using Data and AI to Mitigate Bias and Inequities \n\nNadine Caron\, Professor\, Surgery and First Nations Health Authority Chair in Cancer and Wellness\, University of British Columbia\nYann Joly\, Associate Professor\, McGill University\nAndrew Pinto\, Associate Professor\, Dalla Lana School of Public Health\n\nPanel (May 28) on Re-envisioning Bioethics Education for Social Justice \n\nRosemarie Garland-Thomson\, Professor Emerita\, Emory College of Arts and Sciences\nCaroline Lidstone-Jones\, Chief Executive Officer\, Indigenous Primary Health Care Council\nKeisha Ray\, Centre for Humanities and Ethics\, McGovern Medical School\, University of Texas\n\nClosing keynote (May 28): Reflections on Ethical Challenges during the Pandemic  \nBartha Knoppers\, Full Professor\, Canada Research Chair in Law and Medicine; Director of the Centre of Genomics and Policy\, Faculty of Medicine at McGill University & 2021 Recipient of the CBS-SCB Lifetime Achievement Award
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/behind-the-mask-ethical-issues-revealed-by-covid-19-in-canada-and-beyond/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/cbs2021-e1620664942571.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Joint Centre for Bioethics":MAILTO:jcb.ea@utoronto.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20210407T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20210407T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000818
CREATED:20210402T230238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210402T230345Z
UID:10000059-1617811200-1617814800@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Examining Tensions in Public Health Ethics: Reflections from COVID-19
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the 8th Annual Ross Upshur Lecture on Public Health Ethics. Panelists Sally Bean\, Brian Schwartz\, and Alison Thompson will address ethical tensions touching on issues of clinical decisions\, organizational resources\, policy decision-making\, and international community. Panelists will comment on insights that can inform the future of public health ethics. Maxwell J. Smith will be moderating.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/examining-tensions-in-public-health-ethics-reflections-from-covid-19/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Ross Upshur Lecture on Public Health Ethics
ORGANIZER;CN="Joint Centre for Bioethics":MAILTO:jcb.ea@utoronto.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20210331T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20210331T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000818
CREATED:20210331T120103Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210331T120917Z
UID:10000058-1617206400-1617210000@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Family Veto in Organ & Tissue Donation
DESCRIPTION:Speakers\nJia Lin\, MPH\, Child Health Evaluative Sciences (CHES)\, Hospital for Sick Children \nSarah J. Pol\, MSc\, Child Health Evaluative Sciences (CHES)\, Hospital for Sick Children \nAbout this Seminar\nOrgan and tissue donation (OTD) saves lives and improves quality of life for those in need. In most of Canada\, an individual’s expressed or registered wish for OTD is legally valid consent following death. Family veto (FV) occurs when a deceased donor’s substitute decision-maker overrides or “vetoes” the donor’s registered wish to donate\, evoking a legal and ethical conflict. In this presentation\, we present key findings of two qualitative research projects: a) the framing of family veto in the media (2017) and b) organ and tissue donation coordinators’ experiences with family veto (2021). The presentation illuminates the processes and contexts of FV that prevent successful OTD\, highlights some of the ethical considerations surrounding FV in OTD\, and promotes the advancement of patient-centred care throughout the OTD process. \nAdditional Details\nThis event is free and is open to the general public. \nThe direct link to the seminar will be sent out to registered participants 2 hours before the event. All of the JCB Bioethics Seminars are now being live streamed to our YouTube channel. If you don’t receive the link 2 hours before the event\, please head over there and click on the live stream. Subscribe to our channel to receive notices of live events. \nQuestions?\nPlease email Laurie Bulchak\, laurie.bulchak@utoronto.ca.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/family-veto-in-organ-tissue-donation/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:JCB Bioethics Seminar Series
ORGANIZER;CN="Joint Centre for Bioethics":MAILTO:jcb.ea@utoronto.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20210311T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20210311T123000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000818
CREATED:20210306T220451Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210331T114915Z
UID:10000057-1615460400-1615465800@jcb.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Book Launch for Global Health: Ethical Challenges
DESCRIPTION:This webinar will take place via the Joint Centre for Bioethics YouTube channel\, so please be sure to register to receive the link TWO HOURS before the event. \nThe Joint Centre for Bioethics and the Centre for Global Health\, Dalla Lana School of Public Health\, University of Toronto are pleased to co-host this virtual book launch of Global Health Ethical Challenges (2nd edition) by Solomon Benatar and Gillian Brock\, eds. \nThis talk will feature reflections on the book from Eric M. Meslin followed by three brief commentaries from authors Ross Upshur\, Angela Mashford-Pringle\, and Isabella Bakker who contributed chapters to it. The session will be introduced by Jennifer Gibson\, and the Q&A will be facilitated by Erica Di Ruggiero. \nIndividuals wishing to purchase the book in Canada can place orders through local bookstore Caversham at http://a.cavbk.ca/GHEC2e. Caversham is offering a 10% discount and free shipping to orders placed in Canada. \nInternational orders can be placed directly through the Cambridge website to receive 20% off (please note: they do charge for shipping) via www.cambridge.org/globalhealthlaunch. To receive the discount be sure to enter code ‘GLH2021’ at checkout. \nAbout the Book \nAddressing global health\, one of the largest challenges facing humanity this century\, is becoming an ever more formidable task with the accelerated destruction of the planet and the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. Building upon the successful first edition\, this volume outlines how progress towards improving global health relies on understanding its core social\, economic\, political\, environmental and ideological aspects. Multi-disciplinary authors suggest theoretically compelling arguments for what we must do\, providing practical recommendations for promoting global and planetary health despite contemporary constraints. The importance of cross-cultural dialogue and utilisation of ethical tools in tackling global health problems is emphasised. Updated\, new or expanded topics include: mass displacement of people; novel threats\, including new infectious diseases; global justice; child health; gender equality; the extractive industry; philanthrocapitalism; big data and AI; ecological ethics; and planetary sustainability. Offering a diverse range of perspectives\, this book is essential for bioethicists\, public health practitioners and philosophers.
URL:https://jcb.utoronto.ca/event/book-launch-for-global-health-ethical-challenges/
LOCATION:webinar\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Book Launch
ORGANIZER;CN="Joint Centre for Bioethics":MAILTO:jcb.ea@utoronto.ca
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