Executive Director, Institute for Professionalism and Ethical Practice; Senior Associate in Critical Care Medicine and Perioperative Anesthesia, Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Pain Medicine
Frances Glessner Lee Professor of Legal Medicine, Professor of Anaesthesia (Pediatrics), Harvard Medical School
Executive Director, Institute for Professionalism and Ethical Practice; Senior Associate in Critical Care Medicine and Perioperative Anesthesia, Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Pain Medicine
Frances Glessner Lee Professor of Legal Medicine, Professor of Anaesthesia (Pediatrics), Harvard Medical School
Beyond the Apnea Test: An Argument to Broaden the Requirement for Consent to the Entire Brain Death Evaluation. View Abstract
Tracheostomy in the COVID-19 era: global and multidisciplinary guidance. View Abstract
Parents Demand and Teenager Refuses Epidural Anesthesia. View Abstract
Adult ICU Triage During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic: Who Will Live and Who Will Die? Recommendations to Improve Survival. View Abstract
Use of Nazi torture device image in digital scholarship article. View Abstract
Triage of Scarce Critical Care Resources in COVID-19 An Implementation Guide for Regional Allocation: An Expert Panel Report of the Task Force for Mass Critical Care and the American College of Chest Physicians. View Abstract
The Toughest Triage - Allocating Ventilators in a Pandemic. View Abstract
Location of Clinician-Family Communication at the End of Life in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit and Clinician Perception of Communication Quality. View Abstract
Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment and Limiting Overtreatment at the End of Life. View Abstract
Is 'best interests' the right standard in cases like that of Charlie Gard? View Abstract
Commentary: Defining Death: Definitions, Criteria, and Tests. View Abstract
Interprofessional Shared Decision-Making in the ICU: A Systematic Review and Recommendations From an Expert Panel. View Abstract
Of Slide Rules and Stethoscopes: AI and the Future of Doctoring. View Abstract
In support of mitochondrial replacement therapy. View Abstract
Withholding and Withdrawing Life-Sustaining Treatment and the Relevance of the Killing Versus Letting Die Distinction. View Abstract
How Ought Health Care Be Allocated? Two Proposals. View Abstract
Identifying intangible assets in interprofessional healthcare organizations: feasibility of an asset inventory. View Abstract
Against "Healthy Paternalism" at the End of Life. View Abstract
The price of our illusions and myths about the dead donor rule. View Abstract
Toward Better ICU Use at the End of Life. View Abstract
Medically Inappropriate or Futile Treatment: Deliberation and Justification. View Abstract
The Question of Clinical Equipoise and Patients' Best Interests. View Abstract
The Importance of Deception in Simulation: A Response. View Abstract
Prenatal Decision-Making for Myelomeningocele: Can We Minimize Bias and Variability? View Abstract
Ethical dilemmas with the use of ECMO as a bridge to transplantation. View Abstract
What is a reflex? A guide for understanding disorders of consciousness. View Abstract
Deception and simulation education: issues, concepts, and commentary. View Abstract
An Official ATS/AACN/ACCP/ESICM/SCCM Policy Statement: Responding to Requests for Potentially Inappropriate Treatments in Intensive Care Units. View Abstract
In Favour of Medical Dissensus: Why We Should Agree to Disagree About End-of-Life Decisions. View Abstract
An official American Thoracic Society policy statement: managing conscientious objections in intensive care medicine. View Abstract
Talking with parents about end-of-life decisions for their children. View Abstract
Microethics: the ethics of everyday clinical practice. View Abstract
Medical futility: a new look at an old problem. View Abstract
Should we tell parents when we've made an error? View Abstract
Seeking worldwide professional consensus on the principles of end-of-life care for the critically ill. The Consensus for Worldwide End-of-Life Practice for Patients in Intensive Care Units (WELPICUS) study. View Abstract
Family participation during intensive care unit rounds: goals and expectations of parents and health care providers in a tertiary pediatric intensive care unit. View Abstract
Epidemiology of death in the PICU at five U.S. teaching hospitals*. View Abstract
The meaning of brain death: a different view. View Abstract
Apologies in medicine: legal protection is not enough. View Abstract
Physicians, medical ethics, and execution by lethal injection. View Abstract
Measuring the quality of dying and death in the pediatric intensive care setting: the clinician PICU-QODD. View Abstract
Defining death: the importance of scientific candor and transparency. View Abstract
Changing the conversation about brain death. View Abstract
Futile treatments in intensive care units. View Abstract
Family participation during intensive care unit rounds: attitudes and experiences of parents and healthcare providers in a tertiary pediatric intensive care unit. View Abstract
Talking with patients about other clinicians' errors. View Abstract
The dead-donor rule and the future of organ donation. View Abstract
An official American Thoracic Society workshop report: assessment and palliative management of dyspnea crisis. View Abstract
Triage of intensive care patients: identifying agreement and controversy. View Abstract
An official American Thoracic Society/International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation/Society of Critical Care Medicine/Association of Organ and Procurement Organizations/United Network of Organ Sharing Statement: ethical and policy considerations in organ donation after circulatory determination of death. View Abstract
The incoherence of determining death by neurological criteria: a commentary on "Controversies in the determination of death", a White Paper by the President's Council on Bioethics. View Abstract
Difficult conversations: improving communication skills and relational abilities in health care. View Abstract
Anesthesiology trainees face ethical, practical, and relational challenges in obtaining informed consent. View Abstract
Assessment of communication skills and self-appraisal in the simulated environment: feasibility of multirater feedback with gap analysis. View Abstract
Anesthesiologist management of perioperative do-not-resuscitate orders: a simulation-based experiment. View Abstract
Intercontinental differences in end-of-life attitudes in the pediatric intensive care unit: results of a worldwide survey. View Abstract
Rethinking the ethics of vital organ donations. View Abstract
Assumptions and blind spots in patient-centredness: action research between American and Italian health care professionals. View Abstract
A continuum for using placebo interventions in regional anesthesia and analgesia studies. View Abstract
Not euthanasia, simply compassionate clinical care. View Abstract
Consent for organ donation--balancing conflicting ethical obligations. View Abstract
Recommendations for end-of-life care in the intensive care unit: a consensus statement by the American College [corrected] of Critical Care Medicine. View Abstract
Physicians and execution--highlights from a discussion of lethal injection. View Abstract
End-of-life decision-making in the United States. View Abstract
The controversy over artificial hydration and nutrition. View Abstract
Doing research on the ethics of doing research. View Abstract
Brain death - too flawed to endure, too ingrained to abandon. View Abstract
Reflections on love, fear, and specializing in the impossible. View Abstract
Toward interventions to improve end-of-life care in the pediatric intensive care unit. View Abstract
Proposed quality measures for palliative care in the critically ill: a consensus from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Critical Care Workgroup. View Abstract
Futility--from hospital policies to state laws. View Abstract
Sudden traumatic death in children: "we did everything, but your child didn't survive". View Abstract
Do differences in the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists positions on the ethics of maternal-fetal interventions reflect subtly divergent professional sensitivities to pregnant women and fetuses? View Abstract
Appropriate use of artificial nutrition and hydration. View Abstract
Improving the quality of end-of-life care in the pediatric intensive care unit: parents' priorities and recommendations. View Abstract
Practicing physicians and the role of family surrogate decision making. View Abstract
Informed consent: an end or a means? A response to Miller and Moreno. View Abstract
The ethical conduct of clinical research involving critically ill patients in the United States and Canada: principles and recommendations. View Abstract
Will ethical requirements bring critical care research to a halt? View Abstract
Brain death: at once "well settled" and "persistently unresolved". View Abstract
Perioperative management of diabetes insipidus in children. View Abstract
Perioperative management of diabetes insipidus in children [corrected]. View Abstract
Decision making and satisfaction with care in the pediatric intensive care unit: findings from a controlled clinical trial. View Abstract
Excerpts from the ethics consult report: MT. View Abstract