Archivierte Veranstaltungen
Ethik@Lunch
28. April 2023
Benjamin Gregg, University of Texas at Austin
A Brief Introduction to Creating Human Nature: The Political Challenges of Genetic Engineering
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
12. Mai 2023
Maru Mormina, University of Oxford
‘Capacity for what? Capacity for whom?’ A decolonial deconstruction of research capacity development practices in the Global South and a proposal for a value-centred approach
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
26. Mai 2023
Claudia Bozzaro, University of Kiel
Ethical Aspects in Uterustransplantation
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
16. Juni 2023
Katja Kühlmeyer, LMU Munich, Dr. Esther Schouten, LMU Klinikum
Should neonatal guidelines for end-of-life-decision-making prescribe shared decision-making?
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
30. Juni 2023
Tamar Nov-Klaiman, Ben Gurion University of the Negev
A Tale of Two Societies - Germany and Israel through the mirror of NIPT technology
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
14. Juli 2023
Caesar Atuire, Universities of Oxford and Ghana
Solidarity and Global Health: an approach through the lens of African philosophy
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
21. Oktober 2022
Cynthia Forlini, Deakin University (AUS)
Examining the use of neuroscience in Australian health and social policy
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
4. November 2022
James Wilson, University College London
Public Health Ethics for Complex Systems
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
18. November 2022
Gabrielle Samuel, Kings College London und Federica Lucivero, University of Oxford
Sustainability and data-driven health
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
2. Dezember 2022
Supriya Subramani, University of Zurich
Ethics of Belonging: Why it matters to migrants’ healthcare debates?
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
16. Dezember 2022
Richard Ashcroft, City, University of London
Uncertainty and decision-making in the context of COVID
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
13. Januar 2023
Simon Lohse, Universität Hannover
Pandemics, Policy and Pluralism
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
27. Januar 2023
Orsolya Friedrich, Fernuniversität Hagen
Ethische Herausforderungen der digitalen Phänotypisierung
10. Feburar 2023
Mathias Schütz, LMU München
Das medizinethische Interesse an der Geschichte
29 April 2022:
Prof. Richard Huxtable, University of Bristol
Clinical Ethics Support in the UK: Where Next?
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
13 Mai 2022:
Prof. Christian Munthe, University of Gothenburg
The place of political values in pandemic policy
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
27 Mai 2022:
Kaja Maria Schröder und Prof. Christoph Rehmann-Sutter, Universität zu Lübeck
Was beinhaltet "historische Verantwortung" in der Medizinethik
10 Juni 2022:
Prof. Kristin Bærøe, University of Bergen
The Ethics of Machine Learning in Healthcare
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
1 July 2022 (has been postponed from 24 Juni 2022):
Prof. Jennifer Merchant, University Paris 2
Choice or Constraint : Ethical Issues in Access to Assisted Reproductive Technologies
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
8 Juli 2022:
Prof. James Wilson, University College London
Public Health Ethics for Complex Systems
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
22. Oktober 2021:
Prof. Holger Maehle (Durham University (UK)):
„A Short History of British Medical Ethics”
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
19. November 2021:
Clara Key (Universität Augsburg):
“Aktionsnetzwerk Health for Future”
Kommentar: Prof. Verina Wild zum ärztlichen Ethos angesichts des Klimawandels
26. November 2021 (verschoben vom 5. November):
Prof. Nils Hoppe (Leibniz Universität Hannover)
„Wirkstoffe und Patentschutz - Ethische und Rechtliche Fragen“
3. Dezember 2021:
Prof. Claudia Wiesemann (Universitätsmedizin Göttingen):
„Fortpflanzung, Zeit und Gutes Leben – ein komplexes ethisches Dreiecksverhältnis”
17. Dezember 2021: !!!ERSATZVORTRAG!!!
Prof. Alexandra Manzei-Gorsky (Universität Augsburg):
„Digitalisierung und Gesundheit”
Der Vortrag von Prof. Manzei-Gorsky wird aus gesundheitlichen Gründen abgesagt. Es gibt einen Ersatzvortrag von:
Dr. Ruth Horn (Universität Augsburg / Associate Professor, Oxford):
„Sharing whilst caring: solidarity and public trust in a data-driven healthcare system“
Dieser Vortrag ist auf Englisch
21. Januar 2022:
Prof. Bettina Schöne-Seifert (Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster):
„Ethische Überlegungen zum Einsatz palliativer Sedierung“
28. Januar 2022:
Prof. Eva Winkler (Universitätsklinikum Heidelberg):
„Ethische Fragen an der Schnittstelle von Genomforschung und -medizin”
4. Juni 2021:
Dr. med Mirjam Faissner M.A.(Klinik für Psychiatrie, Psychotheraphie und Präventivmedizin / Ruhr-Universität Bochum):
„Werden Menschen mit psychischer Erkrankung diskriminiert? Überlegungen zu epistemischer Ungerechtigkeit in der Gesundheitsversorgung.“
18.Juni 2021:
Dr. Solveig Lena Hansen (Universität Bremen):
„Aufklären, überzeugen, beeinflussen: Potentiale und Grenzen öffentlicher Gesundheitskampagnen aus ethischer Sicht“
2. Juli 2021:
Dr med Philipp Kellmeyer, MD, MPhil (Neuroethics and AI Ethics Lab/ Department of Neurosurgery/ University Medical Center Freiburg):
„Neurotechnologie, KI und Neurorechte: Brauchen wir Schutzrechte für das Gehirn und das mentale Erleben?"
Veranstaltung in Kooperation mit BMBF-Projekt „ META“
16. Juli 2021:
Professor Dr. Jan Schildmann (Universität Halle):
„Regelung der (ärztlich) assistierten Selbsttötung. Überlegungen aus klinisch-ethischer Perspektive“
Workshops
Weitere Informationen finden Sie
26-27 October 2022, Big Data Institute Building, Oxford
Non-Invasive Prenatal Testing: Implementation in England, France and Germany
Organisers: Ruth Horn, Hilary Bowman-Smart and Adeline Perrot
Programme:
Wednesday 26th October 2022
14:00 – 14:40: Ruth Horn, Universities of Oxford and Augsburg, Introduction
SESSION 1: THE ENGLISH CASE
14:40 – 15:10: Felicity Boardman, University of Warwick
Attitudes to prenatal diagnosis amongst people living with genetic conditions
15:10 – 15:40: Heather Strange, Cardiff University
User experiences of NIPT: findings from qualitative research with private patients in the UK
15:40 – 15:50: Jane Fisher, Antenatal Results and Choices
Summary: The English Case
15:50 – 16:00: Break
SESSION 2: THE GERMAN CASE
16:00 – 16:30: Hilary Bowman-Smart, University of Oxford
Non-invasive prenatal testing in Germany: a unique ethical and policy landscape
16:30 – 17:00: Dagmar Schmitz, Aachen University (Online)
The aftermath of NIPT: changing clinical pathways and abortion practices
17:00 – 17:30: Tamar Nov Klaiman, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
A Tale of Two Societies - Germany and Israel through the mirror of NIPT technology
17:30 – 18:00: Julia Perry, University Medical Center Göttingen
Anticipation and Decision-Making regarding NIPT in Germany
18:00 – 18:10: Christoph Rehmann-Sutter, University of Lübeck
Summary: The German Case
Thursday 27th October 2022
SESSION 3: THE FRENCH CASE
09:30 – 10:00: Caroline Lafarge, University of West London & Isabelle Ville, EHESS
The collective labouring of emotions in the context of pregnancy termination for fetal anomaly in France: a socio-political perspective
10:00 – 10:30: Laurence Lohmann, Laboratoire Cerba
Organization of NIPT in the prenatal course of pregnant women in France
10:30 – 11:00: Adeline Perrot, University of Oxford
Health professionals and scientists’ views on Genome-Wide NIPT in routine clinical care in France
11:00 – 11:10: Carine Vassy, University of Paris 13
Summary: The French Case
11:10 – 11:30 Coffee
CONCLUSION
11:30 – 11:40 Angus Clarke, Cardiff University
Commentary and key take-away messages
11:40 – 12:00 Ruth Horn
Final discussion and closure
Further information here: https://www.ethox.ox.ac.uk/Our-research/research-projects/nipt
07.10.2021| 14:00 – 16:00 (CEST) (
Flyer
)
Online-Workshop via Zoom in English, organized by Ruth Horn, Verina Wild and the META-research group.
Trust and empathy in a digitalised healthcare system
Dr Angeliki Kerasidou is a Nuffield Department of Population Health Senior Fellow at the Ethox Centre and Research Fellow at the Wellcome Centre for Ethics and Humanities, University of Oxford. She is also Fellow at Reuben College where she leads the Ethics and Values Theme
Artificial intelligence and digitalised diagnosis: what are the issues?
Nina Hallowell is Professor of social and ethical aspects of genomics at the University of Oxford.
Abstract: In my talk I will reflect on the issues arising from the use of AI in the diagnosis of rare genetic diseases. I will describe the use of facial recognition technology in the subspeciality of dysmorphology. By focusing upon claims that AI technology may help to eradicate diagnostic uncertainty I will look at related ethical implications of the adoption of AI-generated diagnosis such as implications for notions of trustworthiness, algorithmic bias, transparency and the nature of objectivity in digitalised diagnosis.
Commentary
Dr Philipp Kellmeyer is a neurologist at the University Medical Center Freiburg where he heads the Neuroethics & AI Ethics Lab at the Department of Neurosurgery.
October 27-28, 2021 on Zoom
The Brocher workshop is organised by Tereza Hendl, Bianca Jansky, Niels Nijsingh and Verina Wild.
Mobile health (mHealth) technologies are increasingly being utilized worldwide. These involve a wide range of apps, wearables, implants and other digital devices that purport to improve health. While these technologies have considerable potential to improve health, the developments in mobile health technology affect individuals and societies in ways that raise various ethical concerns. At this workshop, we will be taking a closer look at the ethical and social implications of mHealth technologies as a global phenomenon, investigating the issues that arise from global, globalized and transnational perspectives.
The workshop will interrogate issues, such as the ethical implications of mHealth in LMICs, the challenges of and for intersectionality in the health technology context, concerns regarding the potential of mHealth for democratizing healthcare, the tensions involved in private data infrastructures for public healthcare and related power imbalances and ethical issues, structural inequalities in digital labour and its outsourcing, demands of Indigenous Data Sovereignty within digital health platforms and broader challenges of global digital health ethics.
Workshop programme (CET):
Day 1: Wed Oct 27
10:00-10:20 Verina Wild (University of Augsburg): Welcome and introductions
10:20-11:00 Shada Alsalamah (the WHO): Digital Health: The Global Agenda 2020-2025
11:00-11:10 break
11:10-11:50 Angella Musiimenta (Mbarara University of Science and Technology): The ethics of mHealth in low
resource settings
11:50-12:30 Agomoni Ganguli-Mitra (University of Edinburgh) & Carina Fourie (University of Washington): Technology and global health partnerships: challenges of and for intersectionality
12:30-13:30 Lunch Break
13:30-14:10 Tereza Hendl (University of Augsburg & Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich) & Ayush Shukla (Technical University of Munich & University of Augsburg): Can digital health technologies democratize healthcare?
14:10-14:50 Jessica Haberer (Harvard Medical School): When mHealth works and when it doesn't: lessons from HIV and TB globally
14:50-15:00 break
15:00-15:40 Sridhar Venkatapuram (King's College London): Prioritarian ethics for mHealth and health technological innovations in LMICs
15:40-16:00 Daily Wrap-up
Day 2: Thu Oct 28
10:00-10:40 Tsvetelina Hristova (Western Sydney University): Data infrastructures, digital labour and the outsourcing of medical diagnostics
10:40-11:20 Tamar Sharon (Radboud University): Private infrastructure, public healthcare: mHealth, datafication and the Googlization of health
11:20-11:30 break
11:30-12:10 Niels Nijsingh (University of Augsburg & Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich): Beyond bioethics: the challenges of global digital health ethics
12:10-13:10 Lunch Break
13:10-13:50 Tiara Roxanne (independent scholar): The demands for global Indigenous Data Sovereignty and the implications for digital health platforms
13:50-14:30 Bianca Jansky (University of Augsburg & Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich) & Tereza Hendl (University of Augsburg & Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich): Patient activism in mHealth: by whom and for whom?
Azakhiwe Nocanda-Höhling (Humboldt University of Berlin): The (in)visibility of minorities: preferably unheard or deliberately silenced?
14:30-14:40 break
14:40-15:20 Arthur Gwagwa (Utrecht University) & Emre Kazim (University College London): Repurposing the biometrics assemblage to serve health needs: lessons from Africa
15:20-15:40 Verina Wild: closing summary
Reading Seminar "Health and Justice"
Summer term 2022
Feb 10: Preparation (= no meeting, individual preparation)
Feb 17: Goldberg D I (pp 1-15) “Public Health Ethics and the Social Determinants of Health”, Springer 2017
Feb 24: Preparation
March 3: Goldberg D II (pp 17-32) “Public Health Ethics and the Social Determinants of Health”
Author is present
March 10: Preparation
March 17: Goldberg D III (pp 33-51) “Public Health Ethics and the Social Determinants of Health”
Author is present
March 24: Preparation
March 31: Preda A & Voigt K: “The Social Determinants of Health: Why Should We Care?”
Author is present
April 7: Preparation
April 21: Wilson J: “Health inequities” in Dawson A: Public Health Ethics. Cambridge 2011
Author is present
April 28: Preparation
May 12: O’Neill O. Public Health or Clinical Ethics: Thinking beyond Borders. Ethics int aff. 2002 Sep;16(2):35–45.
May 26: Preparation
June 2: Dawson A. Resetting the parameters. Public health as the foundation for public health ethics. In: Dawson A, editor. Public Health Ethics Key Concepts and Issues in Policy and Practice. Cambridge University Press; 2011. (pp. 1–19.)
Author is present
June 9: Preparation
June 16: Fourie C. DISCRIMINATION, EMOTION, AND HEALTH INEQUITIES. The Ethics Forum 2018;13(3):123–49: https://www.erudit.org/en/journals/ateliers/2018-v13-n3-ateliers04696/1061222ar/
Author is present
June 30: Preparation
July 7: -cancelled-
July 14: Preparation
July 21: IAB World Congress of Bioethics in Basel > Meeting in person with those who can join
Summer Break