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Featured Content

Case and Commentary
Apr 2025

¿Cómo deberían proteger los miembros del equipo de cirugía a los pacientes que están privados de libertad de la vigilancia o intrusión de los oficiales del centro penitenciario?

Anna Lin, MD and Mallory Williams, MD, MPH
Case and Commentary
Feb 2025

¿Cómo se debe describir y tratar el dolor causado por la colocación del DIU?

Veronica Hutchison, MD and Eve Espey, MD, MPH

Articles

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  • msoc3-2207
    Medicine and Society
    Jul 2022

    What Arts-and-Health Practices Teach Us About Participation, Re-presentation, and Risk

    Sofie Layton, MRes, Jo Wray, PhD, Victoria Walsh, PhD, and Giovanni Biglino, PhD
    Based on an artist’s, bioengineer’s, and health psychologist’s reflections on pediatric and adult group workshop practice settings, this article suggests 8 dimensions of risk that deserve ethical attention.
    AMA J Ethics. 2022;24(7):E638-645. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2022.638.
  • cscm1-2206
    Case and Commentary
    Jun 2022

    How Should Relief Organizations Fund Care of Patient-Asylees Who Have Cancer?

    Farrah J. Mateen, MD, PhD and Paul B. Spiegel, MD, MPH
    Several clinical and ethical dilemmas arise when caring for refugees with complex, costly, and chronic conditions.

    Read in:

    • عربي
    AMA J Ethics. 2022;24(6):E457-462. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2022.457.
  • medu1-2206
    Medical Education
    Jun 2022

    Everyone Is Harmed When Clinicians Aren’t Prepared

    Thalia Arawi, PhD, Ghassan S. Abu-Sittah, MBChB, and Bashar Hassan
    Decolonization of curricula in health professions is key to preparing clinicians to respond with care and competence to vulnerabilities and disease burden exacerbated by conflict.

    Read in:

    • عربي
    AMA J Ethics. 2022;24(6):E489-494. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2022.489.
  • cscm4-2206
    Case and Commentary
    Jun 2022

    How Should Military Health Care Workers Respond When Conflict Reaches the Hospital?

    Hunter Jackson Smith, MD, MPH, MBE, Joseph Procaccino, JD, MFS, and Megan Applewhite, MD, MA
    Crises can require all clinicians to modify practice priorities during extreme circumstances.

    Read in:

    • عربي
    AMA J Ethics. 2022;24(6):E478-482. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2022.478.
  • msoc1-2206
    Medicine and Society
    Jun 2022

    Traumatic Imagination in Traditional Stories of Gender-Based Violence

    Ayesha Ahmad, PhD, Lida Ahmad, MA, Shazana Andrabi, MA, Lobna Ben Salem, PhD, Peter Hughes, MBBS, Jenevieve Mannell, PhD, Sharli Anne Paphitis, PhD, and Gamze Senyurek, MA
    Storytelling can confer some protection from stigma to individual women in Turkish and Afghan societies.

    Read in:

    • عربي
    AMA J Ethics. 2022;24(6):E530-534. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2022.530.
  • cscm2-2206
    Case and Commentary
    Jun 2022

    Should Children Be Enrolled in Clinical Research in Conflict Zones?

    Dónal O’Mathúna, PhD and Nawaraj Upadhaya, PhD
    Research that places subjects and investigators at risk of additional harm must be considered carefully.

    Read in:

    • عربي
    AMA J Ethics. 2022;24(6):E463-471. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2022.463.
  • hlaw1-2206
    Health Law
    Jun 2022

    Survivor-Centered Approaches to Conflict-Related Sexual Violence in International Humanitarian and Human Rights Law

    Klearchos A. Kyriakides, PhD, MPhil and Andreas K. Demetriades, MBBChir, MPhil
    During or after conflict, a clinician might be required to provide evidence to an official investigatory body or court.

    Read in:

    • عربي
    AMA J Ethics. 2022;24(6):E495-517. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2022.495.
  • fred1-2206
    From the Editor
    Jun 2022

    Bioethics in Conflict Zones

    Thalia Arawi, PhD and Ghassan S. Abu-Sittah, MBChB
    Working in protracted conflict zones often means offering good health care is a striving in ethics.

    Read in:

    • عربي
    AMA J Ethics. 2022;24(6):E455-456. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2022.455.
  • cscm5-2206
    Case and Commentary
    Jun 2022

    How Should Health Systems Help Clinicians Manage Bias Against Ex-combatants?

    Christopher W. Reynolds and Camilo Sánchez Meertens, MPP
    Clinicians in postconflict health care settings can be tasked with caring for patients who were enemies.

    Read in:

    • عربي
    AMA J Ethics. 2022;24(6):E483-488. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2022.483.
  • msoc2-2206
    Medicine and Society
    Jun 2022

    What Does Ethics Demand of Health Care Practice in Conflict Zones?

    Leonard Rubenstein, JD, LLM and Rohini Haar, MD, MPH
    Traditional clinical and public health ethical obligations are insufficient for practice under attack, threat, and coercion or amidst civilian abuse.

    Read in:

    • عربي
    AMA J Ethics. 2022;24(6):E535-541. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2022.535.

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