Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues explained

The Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues (the Bioethics Commission) was created by on November 24, 2009.[1] The Bioethics Commission advised President Barack Obama on bioethical issues arising from advances in biomedicine and related areas of science and technology. It replaced The President's Council on Bioethics appointed by United States President George W. Bush to advise his administration on bioethics, and the National Bioethics Advisory Commission (1996-2001). No national organization replaced it when its authorization expired; it "held its final meeting at the end of August 2016 and closed its doors."

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Reports

Educational Materials

Commission-developed bioethics educational materials are freely available for download from the archived Bioethics Commission website https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/education.html. They are intended to be adapted for use in diverse learning contexts, including K-12 and higher education classrooms, professional education, and community settings.

Bioethics Commission educational materials include:

Members

Bioethics Commission Staff

The Bioethics Commission was supported by a staff https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/staff.html that provided research, communication, management, and administrative support for its activities. Lisa M. Lee, Ph.D., M.A., M.S. (2012-2017) and Valerie Bonham, J.D. (2010-2011) served as executive director. The research staff, senior advisors, and consultants included public health scientists, educators, lawyers, philosophers, geneticists, and historians, among others.

External links

Notes and References

  1. [s:Executive Order 13521|Executive Order 13521]
  2. Capron . Alexander M. . 2017-05-22 . Building the Next Bioethics Commission . The Hastings Center Report . 47 Suppl 1 . Suppl Suppl 1 . S4–S9 . 10.1002/hast.710 . 1552-146X . 6617774 . 28543661.
  3. https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/node/5678.html
  4. https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/node/4704.html''Gray Matters: Topics at the Intersection of Neuroscience, Ethics, and Society
  5. https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/node/4637.html Ethics and Ebola: Public Health Planning and Response
  6. https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/node/3543.html Gray Matters: Integrative Approaches for Neuroscience, Ethics, and Society
  7. https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/node/3183.html''Anticipate and Communicate: Ethical Management of Incidental and Secondary Findings in the Clinical, Research, and Direct-to-Consumer Contexts
  8. https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/node/833.html''Safeguarding Children: Pediatric Medical Countermeasure Research
  9. https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/node/764.html''Privacy and Progress in Whole Genome Sequencing
  10. https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/node/558.html Moral Science: Protecting Participants in Human Subjects Research
  11. https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/node/654.html Ethically Impossible: STD Research in Guatemala from 1946 to 1948
  12. https://bioethicsarchive.georgetown.edu/pcsbi/synthetic-biology-report.html New Directions: The Ethics of Synthetic Biology and Emerging Technologies