by admin | Dec 6, 2024 | Depression, Ethics
Sam Carr, University of Bath; Els van Wijngaarden, Radboud University, and Kenneth Chambaere, Ghent University I can totally relate to tiredness of life. Guess what? I saw a beautiful sunrise yesterday morning, acknowledged it, and couldn’t care less if I saw another...
by admin | Nov 22, 2024 | COVID-19, Ethics
Dr. Philip McMillan, John McMillan Over four years into the aftermath of a pandemic that reshaped the world, the origins of COVID-19 remain a subject of intense investigation and debate. Did the virus emerge from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, a biosafety level 4...
by admin | Nov 15, 2024 | COVID-19, Ethics
Dr. Philip McMillan, John McMillan The COVID-19 pandemic has evolved into much more than a worldwide health crisis; it has become a stage where politics and science often clash, ultimately harming public health. The controversy surrounding hydroxychloroquine (HCQ)...
by admin | Nov 8, 2024 | Ethics, Medical Research
Dr. Philip McMillan, John McMillan mRNA vaccines have undeniably shaken up the medical world, especially with their groundbreaking role during the COVID-19 pandemic. These vaccines, which teach our cells to produce a protein that triggers an immune response, have...
by admin | Nov 1, 2024 | Ethics, Genetics, Medical Research
Françoise Baylis, Dalhousie University A little-noticed change to South Africa’s national health research guidelines, published in May of this year, has put the country on an ethical precipice. The newly added language appears to position the country as the first to...
by admin | Nov 1, 2024 | Ethics, Health
Karandeep Sonu Gaind, University of Toronto Earlier this month, the Office of the Chief Coroner for Ontario highlighting some of the (MAiD, which in Canada involves euthanasia — meaning medically-administered injection rather than self-administered — over 99.9 per...
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