a. identification leigh turner, ph.d.leigh turner. 2008. bioethics and social studies of medicine:...

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CURRICULUM VITAE A. IDENTIFICATION Leigh Turner, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Center for Bioethics; School of Public Health; Department of Pharmaceutical Care and Health Systems, College of Pharmacy University of Minnesota Address: Center for Bioethics University of Minnesota N504 Boynton, 410 Church Street, SE Minneapolis, MN 55455 Email: turne462.umn.edu Phone: 612.626.4330 Fax: 612.624.9108 B. EDUCATION Graduate: 1996 Ph.D. School of Religion and Social Ethics, University of Southern California 1995 M.A. School of Religion and Social Ethics, University of Southern California 1993 M.A. Department of Religion, University of Manitoba Undergraduate: 1990 B.A. Department of Religious Studies, University of Winnipeg Dissertations Leigh Turner. 1996. Bioethics in a Pluralistic World: Truth Telling, Informed Consent and Euthanasia. Doctoral thesis submitted to the School of Religion and Social Ethics, University of Southern California. Dissertation Committee Members: William W. May, John Orr, Alison Dundes Renteln, Stephen Toulmin. Leigh Turner. 1993. Understanding the Active Voluntary Euthanasia Debate. Master of Arts thesis submitted to the Department of Religion. University of Manitoba. Dissertation Committee Members: John Badertscher, Dawne McCance, Carl Ridd, Arthur Schafer

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Page 1: A. IDENTIFICATION Leigh Turner, Ph.D.Leigh Turner. 2008. Bioethics and Social Studies of Medicine: Overlapping Concerns. November 12, 2007 accepted for publication in Cambridge Quarterly

CURRICULUM VITAE

A. IDENTIFICATION Leigh Turner, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Center for Bioethics; School of Public Health; Department of Pharmaceutical Care and Health Systems, College of Pharmacy University of Minnesota Address: Center for Bioethics University of Minnesota N504 Boynton, 410 Church Street, SE Minneapolis, MN 55455 Email: turne462.umn.edu Phone: 612.626.4330 Fax: 612.624.9108 B. EDUCATION

Graduate: 1996 Ph.D. School of Religion and Social Ethics, University of Southern California 1995 M.A. School of Religion and Social Ethics, University of Southern California 1993 M.A. Department of Religion, University of Manitoba Undergraduate: 1990 B.A. Department of Religious Studies, University of Winnipeg Dissertations Leigh Turner. 1996. Bioethics in a Pluralistic World: Truth Telling, Informed Consent and Euthanasia. Doctoral thesis submitted to the School of Religion and Social Ethics, University of Southern California. Dissertation Committee Members: William W. May, John Orr, Alison Dundes Renteln, Stephen Toulmin. Leigh Turner. 1993. Understanding the Active Voluntary Euthanasia Debate. Master of Arts thesis submitted to the Department of Religion. University of Manitoba. Dissertation Committee Members: John Badertscher, Dawne McCance, Carl Ridd, Arthur Schafer

Page 2: A. IDENTIFICATION Leigh Turner, Ph.D.Leigh Turner. 2008. Bioethics and Social Studies of Medicine: Overlapping Concerns. November 12, 2007 accepted for publication in Cambridge Quarterly

C. APPOINTMENTS July 2008-Continuing Appointment Associate Professor, Center for Bioethics; School of Public Health, and Department of Pharmaceutical Care and Health Systems, College of Pharmacy, University of Minnesota September 2006-June 2008 William Dawson Scholar, McGill University July 2006-May 2007 Distinguished Visiting Fellow, Comparative Program on Health and Society, Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto January 2006-July 2006 Acting Director, Biomedical Ethics Unit, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University June 2005-June 2008 Associate Professor (tenured), Department of Social Studies of Medicine, McGill •Chair, Master’s Specialization in Bioethics, Biomedical Ethics Unit •Member, Biomedical Ethics Unit, Faculty of Medicine •Member, Centre for Research on Religion •Associate Member, Faculty of Medicine •Associate Member, Division of Experimental Medicine •Adjunct Professor, Faculty of Religious Studies •Clinical Ethicist, Montreal General Hospital •Coordinator, Bioethics Seminar Series, Biomedical Ethics Unit

August 2000-June 2005 Assistant Professor (tenure-track), Department of Social Studies of Medicine, McGill •Member, Biomedical Ethics Unit, Faculty of Medicine •Member, Faculty of Medicine •Chair, Master’s Specialization in Bioethics, Biomedical Ethics Unit •Adjunct Professor, Faculty of Religious Studies •Clinical Ethicist, Montreal General Hospital •Coordinator, Bioethics Seminar Series, Biomedical Ethics Unit September 2003-July 2004 Member, Institute for Advanced Study, School of Social Science, Princeton, New Jersey

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Page 3: A. IDENTIFICATION Leigh Turner, Ph.D.Leigh Turner. 2008. Bioethics and Social Studies of Medicine: Overlapping Concerns. November 12, 2007 accepted for publication in Cambridge Quarterly

February 1998-August 2000 Assistant Professor/Clinical Ethicist, University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics •Assistant Professor (status-only), Department for the Study of Religion, University of Toronto •Member, University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics •Associate Member, Institute of Medical Science, University of Toronto •Bioethicist, Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care •Bioethicist, Sunnybrook & Women’s College Health Sciences Centre September 1999-December 1999 National Endowment for the Humanities/Sealy & Smith Foundation Visiting Scholar at the Institute for the Medical Humanities, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston August 1996-December 1997 Research Associate, The Hastings Center, Briarcliff Manor and Garrison, New York May 1996-August 1996 Research Assistant, School of Religion and Social Ethics, University of Southern California 1992-1996 Senior Teaching Assistant and Teaching Assistant, School of Religion and Social Ethics, University of Southern California January 1994-May 1994 Graduate Student Internship in Bioethics, University of Southern California •Attended Rounds within Burn Unit, Internal Medicine, Intensive Care Unit, Oncology Unit and Clinical Ethics Committee, Los Angeles County/USC Medical Center D. HONOURS AND AWARDS

2006-2008 William Dawson Scholar, McGill University 2006-2007 Distinguished Visitor Fellowship, Comparative Program on Health and Society, Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto 2003-2004 Member, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton 1999 Sealy & Smith/National Endowment for the Humanities Visiting Scholar,

Institute for the Medical Humanities, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston

1995-1996 Leonard Dissertation Fellowship, University of Southern California 1992-1996 Teaching Assistant Fellowship, University of Southern California 1991 Manitoba Government Fellowship, University of Manitoba 1990 Manitoba Government Fellowship, University of Manitoba

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1990 University Gold Medal in Religious Studies, University of Winnipeg 1990 University Silver Medal in Arts (Four year course), University of Winnipeg 1990 Student of Highest Distinction, University of Winnipeg 1989 Charles R. Newcombe Scholarship in Religious Studies, University of

Winnipeg 1989 RH Institute Academic Proficiency Scholarship, University of Winnipeg 1989 Student of Highest Distinction, University of Winnipeg 1988 Board of Regents Academic Proficiency Scholarship, University of

Winnipeg 1988 Transcona Memorial United Church Scholarship, University of Winnipeg 1988 Student of Distinction, University of Winnipeg 1987 Student of Distinction, University of Winnipeg 1986 Board of Regents Entrance Scholarship, University of Winnipeg E. PUBLICATIONS Refereed Publications

1. Leigh Turner. 2008. Bioethics and Social Studies of Medicine: Overlapping Concerns. November 12, 2007 accepted for publication in Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.

2. Leigh Turner. 2008. “’Medical tourism’ initiatives should exclude commercial

organ transplantation.” Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 101: 1-4.

3. Leigh Turner. 2008. “Cross-border dental care: “dental tourism” and patient mobility.” British Dental Journal 204: 553-554.

4. Leigh Turner. 2008. “Politics, Bioethics, and Science Policy.” HEC Forum 20, 1:

29-47.

5. Leigh Turner. 2008. Let’s wave goodbye to “transplant tourism”. British Medical Journal 336: 1377.

6. Leigh Turner. 2007. “Medical tourism: Family medicine and international health-

related travel.” Canadian Family Physician 53: 1639-1641.

7. Leigh Turner. 2007. “From Durham to Delhi: ‘Medical Tourism’ and the Global Economy.” In, Comparative Program on Health and Society Lupina Foundation Working Papers Series 2006-2007. Ed., Bianca Seaton. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

8. Leigh Turner. 2007. “’First World Health Care at Third World Prices’:

Globalization, Bioethics, and Medical Tourism. BioSocieties 2: 303-325.

9. Leigh Turner. 2007. “Canadian Medicare and the Global Health Care Bazaar”. Policy Options September: 73-77.

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10. Raymond de Vries, Leigh Turner, Kristina Orfali, and Charles Bosk. 2006.

“Social science and bioethics: the way forward.” Sociology of Health & Illness 28, 6: 665-677.

11. Leigh Turner. 2005. “Bioethics, Social Class, and the Sociological Imagination.”

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.” 14: 374-378.

12. Leigh Turner. 2005. “From the Local to the Global: Bioethics and the Concept of Culture.” Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 30, 3: 305-320.

13. Charles McConnel and Leigh Turner. 2005. “Medicine, ageing and human

longevity: The economics and ethics of anti-ageing interventions.” EMBO reports 6: S59-S62.

14. Leigh Turner. 2005. “Is cultural sensitivity sometimes insensitive?” Canadian

Family Physician 51: 478-480.

15. Miriam Brouillet and Leigh Turner. 2005. “Bioethics, Religion, and Democratic Deliberation: Policy Formation and Embryonic Stem Cell Research.” Health Care Ethics Committee Forum 17 (1): 49-63.

16. Leigh Turner. 2005. Review essay of Raymond Geuss. 2001. Public Goods,

Private Goods. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. The Journal of Value Inquiry 39: 131-137.

17. Leigh Turner. 2004. Review essay of Maurizio Viroli. 2002. Republicanism. New

York: Hill and Wang. The Journal of Value Inquiry 38: 273-279.

18. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Bioethics in pluralistic societies.” Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 7: 201-208.

19. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Life Extension Research: Health, Illness, and Death.”

Health Care Analysis 12, 2: 117-130.

20. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Biotechnology, Bioethics, and anti-aging interventions. Trends in Biotechnology 22, 5: 219-221.

21. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Recognizing the Persistence of an Ethical Conflict: Disputes

Concerning What Constitutes Appropriate Levels of Care: Part I.” Annals of Long-Term Care: Clinical Care and Aging 12, 2: 15-19.

22. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Recognizing the Persistence of an Ethical Conflict: Disputes

Concerning What Constitutes Appropriate Levels of Care: Part II.” Annals of Long-Term Care: Clinical Care and Aging 12, 3: 21-24.

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23. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Ethics Board Review of Biomedical Research: Improving the Process.” Drug Discovery Today 9, 1: 8-12.

24. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Promoting F.A.I.T.H. in Peer Review: Five Core Attributes

of Effective Peer Review.” Journal of Academic Ethics 1, 2: 181-188.

25. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Bioethics and Religions: Religious Traditions and Understandings of Morality, Health, and Illness.” Health Care Analysis 11, 3: 181-197.

26. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Life Extension Technologies: Economic, Psychological, and

Social Considerations.” HealthCare Ethics Committee Forum 15, 3: 258-273.

27. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Bioethics in a Multicultural world: Medicine and Morality in Pluralistic Settings.” Health Care Analysis 11, 2: 99-117.

28. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Doffing the mask: Why Manuscript reviewers ought to be

identifiable.” Journal of Academic Ethics 1, 1: 41-48.

29. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Zones of Consensus and Zones of Conflict: Questioning the ‘Common Morality’ Presumption in Bioethics.” Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 13, 3: 193-218.

30. Leigh Turner. 2002. “Bioethics and end-of-life care in multi-ethnic settings:

cultural diversity in Canada and the United States of America.” Mortality 7, 3: 285-301.

31. Leigh Turner. 2002. “Medical Facilities as Moral Worlds.” Medical Humanities.

28, 1: 19-22.

32. Leigh Turner. 2001. “Medical ethics in a multicultural society.” Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 94: 592-594.

33. Leigh Turner. 2001. “Narrative, Thick Description, and Bioethics: Cases, Stories,

and Simone de Beauvoir’s A Very Easy Death.” The Journal of Clinical Ethics 12, 2: 122-130.

34. Michael Gordon, Leigh Turner, Eileen Bourret. 2000. “Addressing Ethical Issues

in Geriatrics and Long-Term Care: Ethics Education at The Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care.” Medicine and Law 19: 475-491.

35. Michael Gordon, Shelley A. Sternberg, and Leigh Turner. 1999. “The Ethics of

Health Care Systems: Contrasting Canada and the United States.” Annals of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada 32, 5: 267-271. See also the letters to the editor and the authors’ response in Annals of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada 32, 8 December 1999: 459-462.

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36. Leigh Turner. 1998. “An Anthropological Exploration of Contemporary

Bioethics: The Varieties of Common Sense.” Journal of Medical Ethics 24: 127-133.

37. Leigh Turner. 1998. “The Greening of Bioethics: Corporate Funding of Bioethics

Research.” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 7: 326-328.

38. Leigh Turner. 1997. “Bioethics, Public Health, and Firearm-Related Violence: Missing Links Between Bioethics and Public Health.” Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 12, 1 (Spring): 5-11.

39. Leigh Turner. 1997. “Euthanasia and distinctive horizons of moral reasoning.”

Mortality 2, (3): 191-205.

Non-Refereed Publications in Scholarly Journals (articles accepted by journal editors or editorial boards)

1. Raymond De Vries, Leigh Turner, Kristina Orfali, Charles Bosk. 2007. “Social Science and bioethics: morality from the ground up.” Clinical Ethics 2, 1: 33-35.

2. Leigh Turner. 2006. “Comment.” Invited response to “Politics, Culture, and

Governance in the Development of Prior Informed Consent in Indigenous Communities” by Joshua Rosenthal, Current Anthropology 47, 1: 136-137.

3. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Television on the Cutting Edge: Cosmetic Surgery Goes

Prime-Time.” Virtual Mentor: Ethics Journal of the American Medical Association 6, 10. http://virtualmentor.ama-assn.org/2004/10/msoc1-0410.html

4. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Bioethic$ Inc.” Nature Biotechnology 22, 8: 947-948.

5. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Biotechnology as Religion.” Nature Biotechnology 22, 6:

659-660.

6. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Science, politics, and the President’s Council on Bioethics.” Nature Biotechnology 22, 5: 509-510.

7. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Is Repugnance Wise? Visceral Responses to

Biotechnology.” Nature Biotechnology 22, 3: 269-270.

8. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Graduate Education and Employment Opportunities in Bioethics.” Nature Biotechnology 22, 2: 247-249.

9. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Long Term Geriatric Care and the Ethics of Place.”

Geriatrics & Aging 7, 3: 88-90.

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10. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Agenda-Setting in Bioethics.” British Medical Journal 328: 175.

11. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Cloaked Journal Referees: Esteemed Goalkeepers of the

Scholarly World.” Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal 86, 1-2: 203-210.

12. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Time to drop the language of ‘consensus.’” Nature Biotechnology 21, 12: 1433.

13. Leigh Turner. 2003. “The tyranny of ‘genethics.’” Nature Biotechnology 21, 11:

15.

14. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Has the President’s Council on Bioethics Missed the Boat?” British Medical Journal 327: 629.

15. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Bioethics and anthropology: Bridges and barriers to

transdisciplinary research.” Invited response to “Rites of consent: Negotiating research participation in diverse cultures,” by Robert J. Barrett and Damon B. Parker. Monash Bioethics Review 22, 3: 12-17.

16. Leigh Turner. 2002. “Policy-Making and Moral Reasoning: Why the CIHR

Guidelines on Pluripotent Stem Cell Research are Inadequate.” Policy Options 23, 08: 41-44.

17. Leigh Turner. 2002. “A career in clinical ethics.” British Medical Journal. 325:

s105-s106.

18. Jennifer Gold and Leigh Turner. 2002. “Biotechnology and the 21st Century Gold Rush: Protecting Indigenous Communities in an Age of Bioprospecting.” Annals of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada 35, 5: 311-313.

19. Michael Gordon and Leigh Turner. 2001. “Baycrest’s Unit-based Ethics Rounds:

A Prototype for Long-term Care Facilities.” Geriatrics & Aging 4, 4: 9-10.

20. Leigh Turner and Jennifer Gold. 1999. “The Aftermath of the JAMA Fiasco: Medicine, Politics and the Scope of Medical Journals.” Annals of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada 32, 7 October: 384-387.

21. Leigh Turner. 1997. “A Sheep Named Dolly.” Canadian Medical Association

Journal Volume 156, 8, (April 15): 1149-1150.

22. Leigh Turner. 1997. “At The Center.” Hastings Center Report, 27, 2.

23. Eve DeVaro and Leigh Turner. 1997. “Research Notes.” Hastings Center Report, 27, 1: 48.

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Books

1. Raymond de Vries, Leigh Turner, Kristina Orfali, Charles Bosk. (Eds.), 2007. The View from Here: Bioethics and the Social Sciences. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.

Book Chapters

1. Leigh Turner. 2007. “Bioethics, Social Class, and the Sociological Imagination.” In, Social Inequality: Social Class and Its Consequences. Editors, Janis Johnston and D. Stanley Eitzen. Paradigm Publishers. Article reprinted from Leigh Turner. 2005. “Bioethics, Social Class, and the Sociological Imagination.” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 14: 374-378.

2. Raymond de Vries, Leigh Turner, Kristina Orfali, and Charles Bosk. 2007.

“Social science and bioethics: the way forward.” In, The View from Here: Bioethics and the Social Sciences. Editors, Raymond de Vries, Leigh Turner, Kristina Orfali, and Charles Bosk. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing. Chapter reprinted from Sociology of Health & Illness 28, 6: 665-677.

3. Leigh Turner. 2007. “The Media and the Ethics of Cloning.” In, College Writers

Handbook (Eds.), Randall VanderMey, Verne Meyer, John Van Rys, Patrick Sebranek. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Publishing. Article reprinted from Leigh Turner. 1997. “The Media and The Ethics of Cloning. The Chronicle of Higher Education Volume XLIV, Number 5 (September 26): B4-B5. (Scheduled for publication in 2007)

4. Leigh Turner. 2007. “Bioethics in culturally diverse societies.” In, Biomedical

Ethics: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Moral Issues in Medicine and Biology. Ed., David Steinberg. New Hampshire: University Press of New England: 42-47. Article reprinted from Leigh Turner. “Bioethics in culturally diverse societies.” 2004. Lahey Clinic Medical Ethics 11, 2: 1-2, 12. (Scheduled for publication in 2007)

5. Leigh Turner. 2007. “Global Health Inequalities and Bioethics.” In, The Ethics

of Bioethics: Mapping the Moral Landscape. (Eds.), Lisa Eckenwiler and Felicia Cohn. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press: 229-240.

6. Leigh Turner. 2004. “The Media and the Ethics of Cloning.” In, Writing Sense,

(Eds.), Gabrielle Gatreaux and Inge Fink. Boston: Thomson Learning. Reprinted from Leigh Turner. 1997. “The Media and The Ethics of Cloning. The Chronicle of Higher Education Volume XLIV, Number 5 (September 26): B4-B5.

7. Leigh Turner. 2003. “The Media and the Ethics of Cloning.” In, The Arlington

Reader: Cannons and Contexts (Eds.) Lynn Z. Bloom, Louise Smith, and Ning Yu. Bedford/St. Martin’s. Reprinted from Leigh Turner. 1997. “The Media and

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The Ethics of Cloning. The Chronicle of Higher Education Volume XLIV, Number 5 (September 26): B4-B5.

8. Leigh Turner. 2002. The Media and the Ethics of Cloning.” In, The College Writer, First Edition. (Ed.) Randall VanderMey. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Publishing. Reprinted from Leigh Turner. 1997. “The Media and The Ethics of Cloning. The Chronicle of Higher Education Volume XLIV, Number 5 (September 26): B4-B5.

9. Leigh Turner. 2002. “The Media and the Ethics of Cloning.” In, Composition

Anthology (Ed.) Donna Winchell. Dubuque, IA: McGraw-Hill Primis Custom Publishing. Reprinted from Leigh Turner. 1997. “The Media and The Ethics of Cloning. The Chronicle of Higher Education Volume XLIV, Number 5 (September 26): B4-B5.

10. Leigh Turner. 2001. “Bioethics, Public Health, and Firearm-Related Violence:

Missing Links Between Bioethics and Public Health,” Bioethics, Justice, and Health Care (Eds.) Wanda Teays and Laura M. Purdy. Wadsworth Publishing Company.

11. Kathleen Carlin, Michael Gordon, and Leigh Turner. 2000. “Ethical Issues in

End-of-Life Care.” Chapter Four of A Guide to End of Life Care for Seniors. (Eds.) Rory Fisher, Margaret M. Ross, and Michael J. MacLean. University of Toronto: 81-96.

12. Leigh Turner. 2000. “The Media and the Ethics of Cloning.” In, The Norton

Reader: An Anthology of Nonfiction Prose. Tenth Addition. Eds., Linda H. Peterson, John C. Brereton, and Joan E. Hartman. New York: W.W. Norton & Company: 716-720. Reprinted from Leigh Turner. 1997. “The Media and The Ethics of Cloning. The Chronicle of Higher Education Volume XLIV, Number 5 (September 26): B4-B5.

13. Leigh Turner. 2000. “The Media and the Ethics of Cloning.” In, The Norton

Reader: An Anthology of Nonfiction Prose. Shorter Tenth Addition. Eds., Linda H. Peterson, John C. Brereton, and Joan E. Hartman. New York and London: W.W. Norton & Company: 387-391. Reprinted from Leigh Turner. 1997. “The Media and The Ethics of Cloning. The Chronicle of Higher Education Volume XLIV, Number 5 (September 26): B4-B5.

14. Leigh Turner and Eve DeVaro. 1997. “Genetics, Ethics, and Human

Responsibilities.” In, New Choices, New Responsibilities: Ethical Issues in the Life Sciences. (Eds.), Bruce Jennings, Kathleen Nolan, Courtney S. Campbell, Strachan Donnelley, Erik Parens, Leigh Turner, Eve DeVaro. The Hastings Center: 1-33.

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Review Essays and Book Reviews

1. Leigh Turner. 2006. “Multivalent Medications.” Review of David Karp. 2006. Is it me or my meds? Living with antidepressants. Boston and London: Harvard University Press. The Hedgehog Review 8, 3: 100-103.

2. Leigh Turner. 2004. “On your marks, get set…modify.” Invited review of Andy

Miah. 2004. Genetically Modified Athletes: Biomedical Ethics, Gene Doping, and Sport. London and New York. Routledge. The Lancet 364: 573-574.

3. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Antiaging.” Review of Stephen G. Post and Robert H.

Binstock. 2004. The Fountain of Youth: Cultural, Scientific, and Ethical Perspectives on a Biomedical Goal. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Invited review published in Journal of the American Medical Association 292, 17: 2155-2156.

4. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Culinary Dissection.” Canadian Medical Association

Journal 170, 12: 1825.

5. Leigh Turner. 2004. Review essay of Ahmed Okasha, Julio Arboleda-Florez, Norman Sartorius. 2000. Ethics, Culture, and Psychiatry: International Perspectives. Washington, DC and London, England: American Psychiatric Press, Inc. Transcultural Psychiatry 41, 3: 411-413.

6. Leigh Turner. 2004. Review of Nuala P. Kenny, What Good is Health Care?

Reflections on the Canadian Experience. Ottawa, Ontario: CHA Press. March 16, 2004 accepted for publication in Canadian Journal of Public Health.

7. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Cosmetic surgery: the new face of reality TV.” British

Medical Journal 328: 1208.

8. Leigh Turner. 2004. Review essay of Onora O’Neill, A Matter of Trust. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Horizons 6, 4: 50-52.

9. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Warfare, Photojournalism, and Witnessing.” Review of

Susan Sontag, Regarding the Pain of Others. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, Canadian Medical Association Journal 170, 1: 82-83.

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10. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Americans are from Mars, Europeans are from Venus.” Review of Robert Kagan, Of Paradise and Power: America and Europe in the New World Order. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2003. Policy Options 25, 1: 113-115.

11. Leigh Turner. 2003. “Ethical Preparedness.” Review of Jonathan Moreno, Ed., In the Wake of Terror: Medicine and Morality in a Time of Crisis. Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England: The MIT Press. Canadian Medical Association Journal 168, 12: 1574-1575.

12. Leigh Turner. 2002. Toward a More Secular Society? Literary Review of Canada

10, 6: 24-26. (Review essay of Charles Taylor. 2002. Varieties of Religion Today: William James Revisited. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press).

13. Leigh Turner. 2002. Review essay of Stuart Hampshire. 2000. Justice is Conflict.

Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press. Canadian Journal of Law and Society 17, 2: 182-186.

14. Leigh Turner. 2002. Review essay of Anthony Giddens, Runaway World: How

Globalization is Reshaping our Lives. London: Routledge. Transcultural Psychiatry 39, 3: 394-399.

15. Leigh Turner. 2000. “The Bioethicist as ‘Accidental Tourist.’” Medical

Humanities Review 14, 2: 56-59.

16. Leigh Turner. 1999. “Imagining America: Richard Rorty and Pragmatic Social Reform.” Medical Humanities Review 13, 2: 94-101.

Popular Media

1. Leigh Turner. 2007. “It’s no holiday: shopping for kidneys in the Philippines.” The Ottawa Citizen November 14, 2007.

2. Leigh Turner. 2007. “China’s deadly scheme to harvest organs.” The Globe and

Mail July 18, p. A23.

3. Leigh Turner. 2007. China’s transplant tourism. Jerusalem Post April 27, p.12.

4. Leigh Turner. 2004. “The body bazaar.” Orange County Register May 30.

5. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Is Repugnance Wise? Visceral Responses to Biotechnology.” Published in Italian in Darwin. Reprint of “Is Repugnance

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Wise? Visceral Responses to Biotechnology.” Nature Biotechnology 22, 3: 269-270.

6. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Beware the Celebrity Bioethicist.” Chronicle of Higher

Education L, 35: B18.

7. Leigh Turner. 2004. “The bioethics myth.” The Philosopher’s Magazine 26: 23-25.

8. Leigh Turner. 2003. “From Here to Eternity.” University Affairs.

August/September: 40.

9. Leigh Turner. 1999. “Hospitals, dissent and free speech.” The Toronto Star, January 19: A16.

10. Leigh Turner. 1997. “The Media and The Ethics of Cloning. The Chronicle of

Higher Education Volume XLIV, Number 5 (September 26): B4-B5. Newsletters

1. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Oublier Aquinas.” September 1, 2004 accepted for publication in Lahey Clinic Medical Ethics Newsletter.

2. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Bioethics in culturally diverse societies.” Lahey Clinic

Medical Ethics Newsletter 11, 2: 1-2, 12.

3. Leigh Turner. 2004. “Neuroethics and Bioethics Brand Essence: A Modest Proposal for Market Expansion.” ASBH Exchange 7, 2: 7.

F. FUNDED RESEARCH 1. Personal Support Awards 2006-2008 William Dawson Scholar, Funding provided by McGill University 2006-2007 Distinguished Visiting Fellowship provided by Comparative Program on Health and Society, Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto 2003-2004 Salary support (1/2 of salary) provided by School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey

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2000 Salary support provided by Sealy & Smith/National Endowment for the Humanities, Visiting Scholar, Institute for the Medical Humanities, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. 2. Research Grants 1. National Funding Agencies 2003-2009 Culture and Mental Health Services, Principal Investigator: L Kirmayer;

Co-Investigators: M. Beiser, G. Bibeau, E. Corin, F Crepeau, K.C. Glass, C. Rousseau, A Young, L. Turner, M. Lock, et al. Canadian Institutes of Health Research. $298,536 (Canadian funds)

2002-2006 Transfer of Bioscience Knowledge: Gene-based Vulnerability in

Psychiatry. Principal Investigator: Margaret Lock; Co-Investigators: L. Kirmayer, R. Palmour, L. Turner, A. Young. Canadian Institutes of Health Research. December 2001. $375, 461 (Canadian funds)

2002-2005 Ethical Issues Related to Anti-Aging Interventions. Principal Investigator:

Leigh Turner; Co-Investigator: Kathleen Glass. Genome Canada/Genome Quebec: Ethics, Law and Social Issues Component. $91,000 (Canadian funds). Sub-grant awarded from $1,661,375 multi-year block grant.

1999-2004 Bioethics, Casuistry, and Culture: Practical Moral Reasoning in

Multiethnic Settings. Principal Investigator: Leigh Turner; Co-Investigators: Ellen Badone, McMaster University; Michael Gordon, University of Toronto; Trudo Lemmens, University of Toronto; Laura Purdy, University of Toronto. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada $128,550 (Canadian funds)

1999-2003 Norms and Narratives: Values Concerning Health and Illness in An Aging

Population. Principal Investigator: Murray, M.; Co-Investigators: Hanrahan, M., Pullman, D., Simpson, E., Turner, L. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. $380,000. (Canadian funds)

1999-2000 Norms and Narratives: Values Concerning Health and Illness in An Aging

Society. Principal Investigator: Murray M; Co-Investigators: Hanrahan M, Pullman D, Simpson E, Turner L. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. $5,000. (Canadian funds)

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1997-2002 Restoring Wolves to the Adirondacks: Civic Democracy and Obligations to Future Generations. Principal Investigator: Leigh Turner. Co-investigators: Bruce Jennings and Strachan Donnelly. National Science Foundation, $81,000. (U.S. funds) I transferred this project to a colleague when I relocated to the University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics in 1998.

2. University Research Funds and Seminar Support 2006-2007 Global Health Inequalities and Transnational Migration of Health Care

Providers. McGill University Paper Presentation Travel Grant. McGill University Research Grants Office. Presentation at “New Pathways for European Bioethics” in Leuven, Belgium. $1,500 (Canadian funds.)

2006-2007 Global Health Inequalities and Transnational Migration of Health Care

Providers. McGill University Research Grants Office. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Grant. $5,000 (Canadian funds.)

2006-2007 Bioethics Seminar Series Grant. McGill University Research Grants

Office. $1250 (Canadian funds.) 2005-2006 McGill University Professional Development Fund $500.00 (Canadian

funds.) 2005-2006 Bioethics Seminar Series Grant. McGill University Research Grants

Office. $1,000 (Canadian funds.) 2004-2005 McGill University Professional Development Fund $500.00 (Canadian

funds.) 2004-2005 Bioethics Seminar Series Grant. McGill University Research Grants

Office. $1,500. (Canadian funds.) 2003-2004 Bioethics Seminar Series Grant. McGill University Research Grants

Office. $1,500. (Canadian funds.) 2002-2003 Bioethics and Biotechnologies in Contemporary Science Fiction and Film:

Genetics, Ethics and Social Change. McGill University Social Sciences and Humanities Research Grants Subcommittee. $4,968. (Canadian funds)

2002-2003 Bioethics Seminar Series Grant. McGill University Research Grants Office.

$1,500. (Canadian funds) 1998-2001 Culture and Bioethics Research Project. University of Toronto Joint Centre

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for Bioethics. $20,000 (Canadian funds) 3. Contracts and other research funds awarded 2000-2001 Ethical Issues in End-of-Life Care. Health Canada. $3,000 (Canadian funds) 1999-2000 End-of-Life Decision Making: Perspectives of Patients and Substitute

Decision Makers. Principal Investigator: C. Guest. Co-investigators: C, McLean R, Palda V, Vachon MLS, Kelner M, Lam-McCulloch J, Turner L. Sunnybrook Health Science Centre Trust for Medical Research, 1999-2000, $11,897. (Canadian funds)

1999 Sunnybrook & Women’s College Health Sciences Centre Research Summer

Studentship Award, $1,600. (Canadian funds). 1997-1998 Restoring Wolves to the Adirondacks: Civic Democracy and Obligations to

Future Generations, Defenders of Wildlife, June 1997, $5,000. (U.S. funds) 1995-1996 Bioethics in a Pluralistic World. University of Southern California Leonard

Dissertation Fellowship $5,000. (U.S. funds) G. TEACHING RECORD 1. COURSES TAUGHT

(** indicates I organized the course or series within the course) 2007 Biomedical Ethics Unit September-December. Graduate Seminar in Bioethics: Globalization of Health Services. (BIOE 694) McGill University. 28 hours.** 2006 McGill University Faculty of Medicine June. Introduction to the Patient. Ethical Issues Facing Medical Students. Lecture. June 7, 2006. 1 hour. February. Medicine and Society. Ethical Issues in End-of-Life Care. Presentation and panel session. February 23, 2006. 3 hours. January. Medical Ethics and Health Law. Seminars. 8 hours. •Ethical Issues in End-of-Life Care •Confidentiality •Informed Consent and Capacity Assessment •Research Ethics

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McGill University Faculty of Religious Studies January-April. Bioethics and World Religions Graduate Seminar (260-571B) McGill University. 28 hours.** McGill University Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics June. Clinical Trial Protocol Review: Consultation on Ethics. June 21, 2006. 3 hours. 2005 McGill University Faculty of Medicine May. Introduction to the Patient. Ethics Case Discussions. May 25, 2005. Seminar. 1.5 hours. April. Introduction to Ethics Concepts and Cases. Introduction to the Patient: Medical Ethics and Health Law. April 6, 2005. Lecture. 2 hours. March. Transcultural Psychiatry Graduate Seminar. •Social Science Critiques of Bioethics. March 15. 2 hours. January-February. Medicine and Society. Seminars. 18 hours. •The Pharmaceutical Crisis •Objectification and Clinical Trials •Medical Variation and Its Regulation •Medicalization and Risk •A New Mode of Objectification-Genomics January. Introduction to Clinical Medicine. Seminars. 7 hours. •Patients as Research Participants. January 12, 2005. 3.5 hours. •Genetic Testing and Modification and Stem Cell Research. January 20, 2005. 3.5 hours. McGill University Faculty of Religious Studies January-April. Bioethics and World Religions Graduate Seminar. (260-571B) McGill University. 28 hours.** 2004 McGill University Faculty of Medicine August. Unit 1 Ethics and Biotechnology Small Group Discussion Session. August 25, 2004. Seminar Leader. 2 hours.

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2003 McGill University Faculty of Medicine April. Introduction to the Patient: Medical Ethics and Health Law. •Ethical Issues Facing Medical Students. April 30. 2 hours. February. Medicine and Society (524-406B) 12 hours. •Seminar Leader. Human Experimentation. 2 hours •Seminar Leader. The History of Human Experimentation. 2 hours •Seminar Leader. Medicine in Multicultural Societies. 2 hours. •Seminar Leader. Geneticization and Medicalization. 2 hours. •Seminar Leader. The Politics of Clinical Testing. 2 hours. January. Introduction to Clinical Medicine: Medical Ethics and Health Law •Seminar Leader. January 16. Research Ethics. 1.5 hours. •Seminar Leader. January 23. Work Action by Physicians: Ethical Issues. 1.5 hours. Faculty of Religious Studies •January-April. Bioethics and World Religions Graduate Seminar. (260-571B) McGill University. 28 hours.** 2002 McGill University Faculty of Medicine April-May. Introduction to the Patient. Ethics and Health Law Lecture Series. 8 hours.** •Medical Students and Medical Ethics: Ethical Issues Confronting Medical Students. •Ethical Issues in the Care of Jehovah’s Witness Patients •Truth telling and Informed Consent: Ethical and Legal Considerations •Advance Directives and End-of-Life Care. January-February. Medicine and Society (524-406B). McGill University Core Group Leader. 12 hours. •The Past and Future of Medical Objectivity. 4 hours. •Alternative, Complementary, and Indigenous Medical Knowledge and Health Care Practices. 4 hours. •Biomedical Complexity, Medical Judgment and the Politics of Medical Research. 4 hours. January. Introduction to Clinical Medicine. Ethics and Health Law Lecture Series. 12 hours.** •Research Ethics: An Introduction. 3 hours. •Health Law and Disclosure of Medical Error. 3 hours. •Conflicts-of-Interest. 3 hours. •Ethical Issues in End-of-Life Care. 3 hours.

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McGill University Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics June 20. Practical Aspects of Protocol Development (513-660L). 3 hours. •Introduction to Research Ethics: Protocol Analysis 2001 McGill University Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research September-December. Bioethics Theory Graduate Seminar (508-680A). McGill University.** McGill University Faculty of Religious Studies January-April. Bioethics and World Religions Graduate Seminar. (260-571B) McGill University. 28 hours.** McGill University Faculty of Medicine April-May. Introduction to Medical Ethics. McGill University. (Introduction to the Patient/First Year Medical Students). 8 hours.** •Ethical Issues Encountered by Medical Students. 2 hours. •Informed Consent and Capacity Assessment. 2 hours. •Culture, Ethics, and End-of-Life Care. 2 hours. •Addressing Ethical Conflicts in End-of-Life Care. 2 hours. February 22. Cultural Issues and Bioethics. McGill University. (Communication Plus/Fourth Year Medical Students). 3 hours. January 8-25. Medical Ethics & Health Law Course. McGill University. (Introduction to Clinical Medicine A/Second Year Medical Students). 14 hours.** 2000 University of Toronto Faculty of Social Work March 6. Ethical Issues in Geriatric Care. Graduate Seminar in Social Work. University of Toronto. 3 hours. 1999 University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine May 13. Informed Consent. University of Toronto. 2 hours.

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University of Toronto Faculty of Social Work March 8. Introduction to Health Care Ethics: Cases, Principles, and Policies. Graduate Seminar in Gerontological Social Work. University of Toronto. 3 hours. University of Toronto Department of Philosophy March 15. Diversity, Culture, and Community. Clinical Bioethics Course. University of Toronto. 3 hours. 1998 University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine March 12. Ethical Dilemmas of Truth-telling in Medicine Seminar. University of Toronto. 2 hours.

2. RESEARCH TRAINEES SUPERVISED PhD Thesis Supervisor 1. Matthew Hunt. 2005-present. Ethical Issues in International Medical Care and Humanitarian Aid. Division of Experimental Medicine. McGill University. MA and MSc Thesis Supervisor 1. Hayden Bernstein. 2007-2008. Israeli Patients and Ethical Issues Related to Commercial Organ Transplantation. M.A. thesis. Faculty of Religious Studies. McGill University. 2. Jessica Merkel-Keller. 2004-2006. Expectations and Illness: Depression as a Culture-Bound Syndrome in North America. M.Sc. thesis, Division of Experimental Medicine. McGill University. 3. Matthew Hunt. 2004-2005. Ethics Beyond Borders: How Canadian Health Professionals Experience Ethics in Humanitarian Assistance and Development Work. M.Sc. thesis, Division of Experimental Medicine. McGill University. 4. Leo Paquin. 2004-2005. Ethical Issues Raised by the SARS Outbreak in Toronto. M.A. Thesis, Department of Philosophy. McGill University.

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5. Rebecca Whitt Warrick. 2003-2004. Universal Codes of Ethics for Medical Research With Human Subjects: Insights from the Community Orientation of the Zulu and Kikuyu. MA thesis, Faculty of Religious Studies. McGill University. Degree awarded in 2004. 6. Cory Labreque. 2003-2004. Self, Suffering and Dementia. MA thesis, Faculty of Religious Studies. McGill University. Degree awarded in 2004. 7. Leena Al-Qasem. 2002-2003. Islam, Bioethics, and New Reproductive Technologies. MSc. thesis, Department of Experimental Medicine. Faculty of Medicine. McGill University. Degree awarded in 2003. 8. Miriam Brouillet. 2002-2003. Ethical and Legal Aspects of Gene Patenting. MA thesis, Department of Philosophy. McGill University. Degree awarded in 2003. 9. Mohamed Labib. 2002-2004. The Concept of “Medical Futility.” MSc. thesis Department of Experimental Medicine. Faculty of Medicine. McGill University. 10. Erica Sutton. 2002-2003. Prenatal Testing and Informed Choice: The Need for Improved Communication and Understanding Between Healthcare Professionals and Pregnant Women. MA thesis, Faculty of Religious Studies. McGill University. Degree awarded in 2003. Doctoral Committee Member 1. Derrick Aarons. 2005. Doctor-patient communication in government hospitals in Jamaica: Empiric and ethical dimensions of a socio-cultural phenomenon. Doctoral thesis, Division of Experimental Medicine, Faculty of Medicine. Degree awarded in 2005. 2. Sylvie Houde. 2005. Analyse critique a partir d’une perspective interdisciplinaire de la génétique amélioratrice, des principaux paradigms théoriques sous-jacents a la recherche actuelle: de l’approche classique a l’approche tibetaine. Doctoral comprehensive exam. Programme de doctorat en Sciences humaines appliqués. Université de Montréal. Examiners: Beatrice Godard, directrice de recherche, Claude Lessard, Leigh Turner. Internal Examiner 1. Jennifer Marshall. 2004. The Development of Contemporary Medical Genetics Research Models and the Need for Scientific Responsibility. M.Sc. thesis. Department of Experimental Medicine. Faculty of Medicine. McGill University. 2. Jane Chambers-Evans. 2002. Surrogate Decision-making: Speaking on Behalf of Another. M.Sc. thesis. Department of Experimental Medicine. Faculty of Medicine. McGill University.

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External Examiner 1. Maya Goldenberg. 2000. The Theory and Practice of Biomedical Ethics: A Troubled Divide. MA thesis. Department of Philosophy, McGill University. Research Assistant 1. Myriam Brouillet. 2002-2004. Co-Supervisor with Professor Kathleen Glass. 2. Jennifer Bell. 2004-2005. Co-Supervisor with Professor Kathleen Glass. Molson Medical Informatics Student Project 1. Timur Kouliev. 2001-2002. Medical student, McGill Class of 2004, Molson Medical Informatics Site: Biomedical Ethics & Law in Clinical Practice. Available at: http://sprojects.mmi.mcgill.ca/ethics/index.htm McGill Independent Studies Students 1. Carly Mutch, Division of Experimental Medicine, 2006. 2. Matthew Hunt, Division of Experimental Medicine, 2004. 3. Kathleen Austin, Faculty of Religious Studies, 2003. H. CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT 2007-2008 Biomedical Ethics Unit. Globalization of Health Services (BIOE-694). I designed the course syllabus, selected readings, lectured, and moderated seminar discussions. 2001-2006 Faculty of Religious Studies: Bioethics and World Religions Graduate Seminar (260-571B). 28 hours. I designed the course syllabus, selected readings, lectured, and moderated seminar discussions. 2000-2002 Faculty of Medicine. Introduction to the Patient. 8 hours. I designed the course outline, selected lecture and seminar topics, and prepared lectures on such topics as ethical issues

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confronting medical students, truth telling and informed consent, and advance care planning. 2000-2002 Introduction to Clinical Medicine. 12 hours. I designed the course outline, selected lecture and seminar topics, and prepared lectures on such topics as research ethics, conflicts-of-interest in medicine, and ethical issues in end-of-life care. 2001 Bioethics Theory. 28 hours. I designed the syllabus, selected readings, and moderated classroom discussions. Course content included sessions on principles of moral reasoning, case-based analysis, feminist bioethics, virtue theory, bioethics and human rights, narrative ethics, and social science critiques of bioethics. I. LECTURES, TALKS, PRESENTATIONS University/Academic Presentations

1. Research Ethics Board Day. This Shouldn’t Hurt: The Ethical Analysis of Risk in Research. Seminar Leader. Thirteenth Annual Workshop for REB Members & Researchers. McGill University. Biomedical Ethics Unit and Faculty of Medicine. Montreal, Quebec. May 13, 2008.

2. The Rise of “Medical Tourism”: Crossing Borders in Search of Affordable

Health Care. University of Minnesota. Division of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health. Minneapolis, Minnesota. April 30, 2008.

3. “Medical Tourism” and the Global Health Services Marketplace.” Max and

Rose Sadoff Memorial Lecture. University of Minnesota. College of Pharmacy. Minneapolis, Minnesota. April 28, 2008.

4. Bringing Global Issues into Bioethics: Transnational Migration of Health Care

Providers. Panelist. American Society of Bioethics and Humanities. Washington, D.C. October 18, 2007.

5. From Durham to Delhi: ‘Medical Tourism’ and the Global Economy. Center for

Bioethics, University of Minnesota. June 8, 2007.

6. “Medical Tourism” Agencies: Ethics of Out-of-Country Care. Presentation at Crossing Borders: Canadian Patients and Out-of-Country Health Care panel session. Comparative Program on Health and Society, Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto. March 15, 2007.

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7. “First World Surgery at Third World Prices”: Bioethics, Globalization, and the Emergence of “Medical Tourism”. Center for Bioethics, University of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. USA. February 27, 2007.

8. Governance of the Pharmaceutical Industry: Public Goods and Corporate

Interests. Conference on “Access to Medicines as a Human Right: What Does It Mean for Corporate Responsibility?” Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto. Toronto, Ontario, Canada. October 18, 2006.

9. Globalization, Bioethics, and Transnational Migration of Health Care

Providers. Comparative Program on Health and Society Seminar Series. Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto. Toronto, Ontario, Canada. October 4, 2006.

10. Bioethics and Global Migration of Health Care Providers. European

Association of Centres of Medical Ethics, Centre for Biomedical Ethics and Law, Catholic University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium. September 28, 2006.

11. Migration of Health Care Personnel from Poor Societies to Wealthy Nations:

Ethical Considerations. Department of Philosophy. Queen’s University. Kingston, Ontario. June 28, 2006.

12. Research Ethics Board Day: The Subject’s Perspective. Seminar Leader.

Eleventh Annual Workshop for REB Members & Researchers. McGill University. Biomedical Ethics Unit and Faculty of Medicine. Montreal, Quebec. June 9, 2006.

13. Bioethics, Globalization, and International Migration of Health Care Providers.

Clinical Trials Research Group and Bioethics Seminar Series. Biomedical Ethics Unit. McGill University. Montreal, Quebec. May 19, 2006.

14. Bioethics, Globalization, and Transnational Migration of Health Care

Personnel. Department of Philosophy. University of Western Ontario. London, Ontario. May 12, 2006.

15. “First World Surgery at Third World Prices”: Globalization, “Medical

Tourism,” and Cosmetic Surgery. Bioethics and Social Sciences Working Group. Montreal, Quebec. March 12, 2006.

16. Cosmetic Surgery, Biomedicine, and Globalization. Conference on Surgical

Solutions: Identity, Embodiment, and the Mainstreaming of Cosmetic Surgery. Montreal, Quebec. March 7, 2006.

17. Global Health Inequities and Bioethics: Globalization, International Migration

of Health Care Providers, and Access to Health Care. Center for Bioethics, University of Minnesota. Minneapolis, Minnesota. October 14, 2005.

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18. Research Ethics Board Day: REBs and the Role of Community Representatives.

Seminar Leader. Tenth Annual Workshop for REB Members & Researchers. McGill University. Biomedical Ethics Unit and Faculty of Medicine. Montreal, Quebec. May 25, 2005.

19. Seeking the Fountain of Youth: Illness, Aging, and the Human Condition.

University of Virginia. Charlottesville, Virginia. April 19, 2005.

20. Business Consultants or Social Critics?: Pharma-Funding of Bioethics. Panel Presentation at Spring 2005 American Society of Bioethics and Humanities Conference on the Ethics of Bioethics. Albany Medical College. Albany, New York. April 9, 2005.

21. The Way of All Flesh: Health, Illness, Aging, and Death. Invited lecture at In

Pursuit of Happiness: Public Health and the Public Good in Contemporary America. Organized by The Wilson Center for Leadership in the Public Interest, Hampden-Sydney College. Virginia, USA. March 31, 2005.

22. These Boots are Made For Walking: Social Science Critiques of Bioethics.

Invited presentation at Sociology of Bioethics Conference. Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Georgetown University. Washington, D.C. March 18, 2005.

23. “Anti-Aging” Medical Interventions: Ethical Issues and Social Concerns. Panel

Presentation at McGill University Undergraduate Science Students Ethics Education Week. January 27, 2005.

24. Genetics, Biotechnology and News Media: Multiple Sources of “Spin.” Panel

Presentation. McGill Student Bioethics Conference. McGill University. Montreal, Quebec, October 2, 2004.

25. Bioethics, Biotechnology, and Efforts to Slow or Postpone Aging. Keynote

Lecture. McGill Student Bioethics Conference. McGill University. Montreal, Quebec, October 1, 2004.

26. Clinical Trials Registries and the Need for Change. Clinical Trials Research

Group Seminar. McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, September 24, 2004.

27. Bioethics, Social Class, and the Sociological Imagination. Seminar Discussion. Institute for Advanced Study, School of Social Science. Princeton, New Jersey. April 20, 2004.

28. Bioethics, Biotechnology, and Anti-Aging Interventions. Institute for Advanced

Study, School of Social Science. Princeton, New Jersey. February 26, 2004.

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29. Bioethics in Pluralistic Societies. Institute for Advanced Study, School of Social Science. Bioethics Seminar. Princeton, New Jersey. November 12, 2003.

30. Ethical Issues in Multicultural Health Care. Speaker and Panelist. Models of

Mental Health Services for Multicultural Societies. Advanced Studies Institute. Division of Social and Transcultural Psychiatry, McGill University. Montreal, Quebec. June 2, 2003.

31. Research Ethics Board Day. Seminar Leader. Seventh Annual Workshop for

REB Members & Researchers. McGill University. Biomedical Ethics Unit and Faculty of Medicine. Montreal, Quebec. May 28, 2003.

32. Health, Death, and Efforts to Extend the Human Lifespan. Mini-conference.

Extending the Human Lifespan: Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues. Biomedical Ethics Unit, McGill University. Montreal, Quebec. April 11, 2003.

33. Bioethics and End-of-Life Care: Zones of Consensus and Zones of Conflict.

Invited Keynote Lecture. First National Canadian Undergraduate Student Bioethics Conference. St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia. March 1, 2003.

34. Ethical Issues in Embryonic Stem Cell Research: Public Discourse and Public

Policy in Canada. Invited Lecture. Conceiving the Embryo conference organized by Medicine & Human Dignity. Brussels, Belgium. October 20, 2002.

35. REB Responsibilities: The Challenges Ahead. Ethics Resource Person. Sixth

Annual Workshop for REB Members & Researchers. McGill University. Faculty Development Office and Faculty of Medicine. Montreal, Quebec. November 20, 2001.

36. Individualistic and Communal Values: Examining Assumptions about Self-

Fulfillment in the Lives of Baby Boomers. 17th Congress of the International Association of Gerontology. Vancouver, Canada. July 4, 2001.

37. Bioethics and Social Studies of Medicine: Barriers and Bridges to

Transdisciplinary Research. Dalhousie University. Department of Bioethics. Halifax, Nova Scotia. June 25, 2001.

38. Ethical Issues in Media Coverage of Biomedical Research. Presentation. Clinical

Trials Research Group. Biomedical Ethics Unit. McGill University. Montreal, Quebec. June 1, 2001.

39. Issues in Research Ethics: Where Care Stops and Research Begins. Ethics

Resource Person. Fifth Annual Workshop for REB Members and Researchers. McGill University Faculty Development Office in Collaboration with the McGill University Biomedical Ethics Unit. November 16, 2000.

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40. Culture, Medicine, and Bioethics: Practical Moral Reasoning and End-of-Life

Care in Multi-ethnic North America. Canadian Bioethics Society. Quebec City. October 20, 2000.

41. Communication, Culture, and End-of-Life Care in Multi-ethnic Settings.

International Conference on Health & Communication. Barcelona, Spain. September 21, 2000.

42. How Bioethics Became What it Beheld: The Dominance of the “Biomedical

Model” in Contemporary Bioethics. ‘A Wider Rationality’: Science, Religion and Ethical Directions Conference. Emmanuel College, University of Toronto, June 10, 2000.

43. Whom to Treat: Ethical Decisions in Times of Limited Resources. (With Bonnie

Bereskin). The Tri-Joint Congress 2000. Canadian Association of Occupational Therapists/Canadian Physiotherapy Association/Canadian Association of Speech-Language Pathologists and Audiologists. Toronto. May 27, 2000.

44. Bioethics, Cultural Diversity, and End-of-Life Care. Biomedical Ethics Unit,

Faculty of Medicine, McGill University. April 13, 2000.

45. An Introduction to Research Ethics: Policies, Practices and Problems. York University. Toronto. March 15, 2000.

46. Community, Culture and Informed Consent: Ethical Issues in Multinational

Research. University of Toronto Office of Research Services and Faculty of Medicine Research Office. Flavelle House, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto. March 2, 2000.

47. Ethics Education at Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care. (With Michael Gordon,

MD, FRCPC) Ethics Education in Medical Schools. International Center for Health, Law and Ethics, University of Haifa, Israel. Eilat, Israel. February 14, 2000.

48. What is an error, a mistake? Health Care Error Conference. University of

Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics. January 21, 2000.

49. Bioethics and the Provision of Health Care in Multiethnic Settings. Social Science Research Council. Invited Presentation. Ethnic Customs, Assimilation and American Law Working Group. Phoenix, Arizona. January 14, 2000.

50. From Rules and Quandaries to the Creation of Human Dwelling Spaces: An

Essay on the Moral Phenomenology of Place. Institute for the Medical Humanities, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. November 23, 1999.

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51. Comparative Bioethics: Perspectives from the Humanities and Social Sciences.

American Society for Bioethics and Humanities. Second Annual Meeting. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, October 28, 1999.

52. Bioethics, Cultural Diversity and End-of-Life Care. Institute for the Medical

Humanities, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. October 19, 1999.

53. Bioethics, Culture, Ethnic Diversity and End-of-Life Care. Institute for the

Medical Humanities, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. October 18, 1999.

54. Civic Culture, Bioethics and Health Policy for a Multiethnic North America.

Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin. October 14, 1999.

55. Conflict, Consensus and Practical Moral Reasoning: Bioethics in Multi-ethnic

North America. Institute for the Medical Humanities, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. October 12, 1999.

56. Culture, Conflict and Communication in the Clinical Setting: Bioethics in Multi-ethnic North America. Social Science Research Council. Invited Presentation. Ethnic Customs, Assimilation and American Law Working Group. Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts. September 19, 1999.

57. Xenotransplantation, Bioethics, and the News Media. Association for Politics

and the Life Sciences Nineteenth Annual Meeting. Atlanta, Georgia. September 4, 1999.

58. Bioethics and the News Media. The 11th Annual Bioethics Summer Retreat. Hot

Springs, Virginia. June 19, 1999.

59. Reflections on Medicine, Health Care, and Contemporary News Media. Office of Research Services and Faculty of Medicine Research Office. Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto. Toronto, Ontario. February 24, 1999.

60. Medicine, Ethics, and the Popular Media: Promoting Responsible Journalism.

University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics. Toronto, Ontario. January 20, 1999.

61. The Role of the Bioethicist in the Geriatric Setting. Workshop Session:

Addressing Ethical Issues in Geriatric Care Facilities: Baycrest Centre for

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Geriatric Care as a Case Study. The Canadian Bioethics Society 10th Annual Meeting. Toronto, Ontario. October 17, 1998.

62. Negotiating a Job Contract. Workshop Panelist at The Joint Meeting of the

American Association of Bioethics, Society for Bioethics Consultation, Society for Health and Human Values, Baltimore, MD, November 8, 1997.

63. The Ethics of Bioethics, Presentation at The Joint Meeting of the American

Association of Bioethics, Society for Bioethics Consultation, Society for Health and Human Values, Baltimore, MD, November 7, 1997.

64. Religious Traditions, The Biotechnology Industry, and the Dispute Concerning

the Patenting of Genetic Material, Presentation at The Joint Meeting of the American Association of Bioethics, Society for Bioethics Consultation, Society for Health and Human Values, Baltimore, MD, November 7, 1997.

65. The Voices of Religion in Biotechnology: The Gene Patenting Debate, Session

Chairperson and Moderator, The Joint Meeting of the American Association of Bioethics, Society for Bioethics Consultation, Society for Health and Human Values, Baltimore, MD, November 7, 1997.

66. Bioethics in a Pluralistic World, Presentation at the 9th Annual Canadian

Bioethics Society Conference, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, October 18, 1997.

67. Sacred Canopies and Tattered Umbrellas: Bioethics and the Study of Religions, Presentation at the University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics, Toronto, Ontario, September 16, 1997.

68. Cultural Diversity and Bioethics: Cultural Differences, Information Disclosure,

and the Care of Patients with Cancer, Presentation to the Office of Medical Bioethics, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada, September 14, 1997.

69. Multi-ethnicity and Moral Medicine: Cultural Diversity and Decision-Making at

the End of Life, Presentation at The University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics, Toronto, Canada, August 5, 1997.

70. Ethical Issues in Cancer Care. Presentation to the American Cancer Society,

Dutchess County Unit. Fishkill, New York, May 15, 1997.

71. Euthanasia and Distinctive Horizons of Moral Reasoning. Presentation at The Hastings Center, Briarcliff Manor, New York, December 16, 1996.

72. Moral Dimensions of Teaching in a Pluralistic Society. Presentation at the

Annual West Point/Hastings Center Meeting, United States Military Academy, November 4, 1996.

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73. Bioethics in a Pluralistic Society. Presentation at The Hastings Center, Briarcliff Manor, New York, September 25, 1996.

74. A Stake Through the Heart of Liberalism: Recent Feminist and Religious

Challenges to the Liberal Tradition. Presentation to the Gender and the Academy Conference, School of Religion, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, February 20, 1995.

75. Physician-Cancer Patient Interaction: Truth Telling and Deception in Italy,

Japan, and the United States. Presentation to the annual meeting of the Society for Health and Human Values, Washington D.C., November 6, 1993.

Clinical Teaching

1. Physicians and Medical Errors: Ethical Issues. Neurology Rounds. Montreal General Hospital. May 3, 2005.

2. Tube Feeding: Ethical Considerations. Panel Presentation. Grand Rounds. Royal

Victoria Hospital. May 26, 2003.

3. Life Extension Research: Ethical and Psychological Considerations. Clinical Ethics Committee. Montreal General Hospital. May 26, 2003.

4. Truth telling and Informed Consent: Ethical Issues and Organizational

Constraints. Rounds, Department of Radiology, Montreal General Hospital. April 30, 2003.

5. Ethical Issues in Tube Feeding. Panelist. Department of Geriatrics. Montreal

General Hospital. November 22, 2002.

6. Ethical Issues in Embryonic Stem Cell Research. Presentation to Adult Clinical Ethics Committee, McGill University Health Centre. November 20, 2002.

7. Ethical Issues in the Disclosure of Medical Error. Panelist. Grand Rounds. Royal

Victoria Hospital. Montreal, Quebec. October 2, 2002.

8. Disclosure of Medical Error. Panelist. Medical Grand Rounds. Montreal General Hospital. Montreal, Quebec. October 1, 2002.

9. Ethical Issues in End-of-Life Care. Ethics Rounds. Montreal General Hospital.

Montreal, Quebec. April 16, 2002.

10. Research Ethics: An Introduction. Ethics Rounds. Montreal General Hospital. Montreal, Quebec. March 5, 2002.

11. Informed Consent and Capacity Assessment. Ethics Rounds. Montreal General

Hospital. Montreal, Quebec. February 19, 2002.

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12. Ethical Issues in the Communication of Biomedical Research. Department of

Psychiatry. McGill University. Montreal, Quebec. June 11, 2001.

13. Bioethics, Culture, and Contemporary Medicine. Grand Rounds Presentation. Montreal General Hospital. Montreal, Quebec. February 13, 2001.

14. Communication and Decision-Making in the Clinical Setting: Exploring the

Ethical Significance of Religious Values and Cultural Norms. Montreal Children’s Hospital/Hopital de Montreal pour Enfants. November 29, 2000.

15. Relating Religion and Culture to Ethical Decision-Making in Pediatrics: A Panel

Discussion. (With Andrew Delisle, Imam Salam Elmenyawi, Rabbi Michael Wolff). Montreal Children’s Hospital/Hopital de Montreal pour Enfants. November 29, 2000.

16. Culture and ethics in end-of-life care. Workshop presentation. Controversies in

Medical Ethics: Jewish, Secular, and Legal Perspectives. Symposium. Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care. June 23, 2000.

17. An Introduction to Research Ethics: The Regulation of Biomedical Research in

Canada. Grand Rounds. Baycrest Center for Geriatric Care. March 31, 2000.

18. Ethics, Gender and Institutional Hierarchies: Ethical Issues in Social Work. Sunnybrook & Women’s College Health Sciences Centre. March 30, 2000.

19. Psychiatry and Bioethics: Cases and Concepts. Center for Addiction and Mental

Health/University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics. March 15, 2000.

20. Ethical Issues in Geriatric Psychiatry. Department of Psychiatry, Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care. March 13, 2000.

21. Bioethics, Medicine, and the News Media. Medical Grand Rounds. Sunnybrook

& Women’s College Health Sciences Centre. Toronto, Ontario. June 15, 1999.

22. Controversial Cases in Decision-making: What Principles Govern What Decisions? Workshop. Controversies in Medical Ethics: Jewish, Secular, and Legal Perspectives. Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care. June 4, 1999.

23. Medical Researchers and Medical Journalism. Sunnybrook & Women’s College

Health Sciences Centre Hospital Ethics Committee. Toronto, Ontario, May 11, 1999.

24. Ethical Issues in Geriatric Psychiatry. Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care

Teaching Rounds in Geriatric Psychiatry. Toronto, Ontario, May 3, 1999.

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25. Medicine, Science, and Bioethics in the Popular Media: What Can be Done to Promote Responsible Medical Journalism? Kunen-Lunenfeld Applied Research Unit. Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care. Toronto, Ontario. March 11, 1999.

26. All the News That is Fit to Print (And Some That Isn’t): Reflections on

Contemporary Medical Journalism. Grand Rounds Presentation. Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care. Toronto, Ontario. February 26, 1999.

27. Panel respondent. “You Didn’t Know My Father: A Dramatic Presentation

Concerning Living Wills and Advance Care Planning.” 5th Annual Palliative Care Awareness Day. Sunnybrook & Women’s College Health Sciences Centre. Toronto, Ontario. February 22, 1999.

28. Medicine, Ethics, and the Popular Media: Cancer Care and Responsible Medical

Journalism. Grand Rounds Presentation. Toronto-Sunnybrook Regional Cancer Centre. Sunnybrook & Women’s College Health Sciences Centre. Toronto, Ontario. December 2, 1998.

29. Whom to Treat: Ethical Decisions in Times of Limited Resources. Grand Rounds

Presentation at Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care. Toronto, Ontario, September 25, 1998.

30. Ethics in Action: Initiatives and Resources in Ethics at Baycrest Centre for

Geriatric Care. Grand Rounds Presentation at Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care, Toronto, Ontario, May 29, 1998.

31. Dying At The End of The Millennium: Physician Assisted Suicide and

Postmodernity, Presentation to the Department of Medicine, Hudson Valley Hospital Center, Peekskill, New York, May 5, 1997.

32. Understanding the Religious and Cultural Dimensions of the Euthanasia and

Physician Assisted Suicide Debate, Presentation at the Ethics Rounds of The Jewish Home & Hospital for Aged, The Bronx, New York, January 27, 1997.

33. Ethical Issues in Managed Care: Professionalism and the Physician-Patient

Relationship. Presentation to the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, New York Medical College, Biomedical Ethics Series 1996-1997, Westchester County, December 9, 1996.

34. How We View Suffering and Death: Understanding the Euthanasia and

Physician Assisted Suicide Debate. Presentation to the Westchester County Medical Society, Purchase, New York, November 19, 1996.

Community Presentations

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1. Medicine, Ethics & the Media. Academy for Lifelong Learning, Victoria University, University of Toronto. Toronto, Ontario, May 19, 1999.

2. Scientific Research and the Popular Media: The Importance of Responsible

Journalism. The Canadian Institute of Law and Medicine Fall Conference. Conference Theme: Discerning Fact from Fiction: The Law, Ethics and Accountability of Scientific Investigation in Health Care. Toronto, Ontario. November 28, 1998.

3. Andy Warhol Meets Bioethics: Genetics, Ethics, and the Media, Presentation at

the Temple Sisterhood Annual Election Dinner. Great Neck, Long Island, April 16, 1997.

4. Spiritual and Moral Dimensions of the Physician Assisted Suicide and

Euthanasia Debate, Presentation at the Reformed Church of Bronxville, Bronxville, New York, January 19, 1997.

J. OTHER CONTRIBUTIONS 1. Grant Review •Chairperson, Canadian Institutes for Health Research, Committee on Empirical and Conceptual Research on Ethical, Legal and Social Issues in Studies Involving Pregnant Women and Children, September 22, 2005. •Grant Reviewer, Centers of Cancer Nanotechnology Excellence, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes for Health (USA), July 19-22, 2005. •Grant Reviewer, Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research •Grant Reviewer, Associated Medical Services, Incorporated •Grant Reviewer, Canadian Institutes for Health Research •Grant Reviewer, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council 2. Administrative Responsibilities Primary Administrative Responsibilities •2006 (January-July) Acting Director, Biomedical Ethics Unit •2002-2008 Chair, Master’s Specialization in Bioethics, Biomedical Ethics Unit •2004-2007 Class of 1970/Biomedical Ethics Unit Ethics Lecture Series Committee •2001-2007 Coordinator, Bioethics Seminar Series, Biomedical Ethics Unit •2000-2002 Coordinator, Ethics and Health Law Lecture Series, Faculty of Medicine University Committees •October 2006-May 2007. Faculty Recruitment Committee. Biomedical Ethics Unit.\ •September 2002-2008. Chair, Master’s Specialization in Bioethics •September 2000-2008. Admissions Committee, Master’s Specialization in Bioethics

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•December 2001-May 2002. Faculty Recruitment Committee. Biomedical Ethics Unit. •September 2000-November 2002. Course Coordinating Committee. Introduction to Clinical Medicine. McGill University. •September 2000-November 2002. Course Coordinating Committee. Introduction to the Patient. McGill University. •February 1998-August 2000. University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics Advisory Committee. •February 1998-August 2000. University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics Clinical Ethics Committee. Hospital Committees •November 2004-December 2006. Informed Consent Committee. McGill University Health Centre. •August 2000-2007. Clinical Ethics Committee. McGill University Health Centre. •December 2000-May 2003. Chair. Future Policies Research Group. McGill University Health Centre. •August 2000-2003. Resuscitative Measures Committee. Montreal General Hospital. •August 2000-August 2003. Clinical Ethics Committee. Montreal General Hospital. •August 2000-2007. Research Ethics Board. McGill University Health Centre. •September 1999-August 2000. Canadian Cancer Society, Ontario Division, Expert Advisory Panel. •February 1999-August 2000. University of Toronto Office of Research Services Human Subjects Review Panel. •November 1998-August 2000. Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care Research Ethics Board. •February 1998-August 2000. Baycrest Centre For Geriatric Care Clinical Ethics Committee (Co-Chair). •February 1998-August 2000. Sunnybrook & Women’s College Health Sciences Centre Hospital Ethics Committee. •February 1998-August 2000. Sunnybrook & Women’s College Health Sciences Centre Research Ethics Board. 3. Professional Society Membership •Canadian Bioethics Society •Canadian Society for International Health •American Society for Bioethics and Humanities K. CLINICAL CASE CONSULTATION From 2000-2006, I provided clinical ethics consults at Montreal General Hospital. As clinical ethicist for Montreal General Hospital I served as a member of the Adult Clinical Ethics Committee of the McGill University Health Centre and Montreal General Hospital Research Ethics Board. Though most of my consultations occurred at Montreal General Hospital, I provided ethics consultations at other McGill-affiliated institutions.

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Prior to my arrival at McGill I worked as a clinical ethicist from 1998-2000 at Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care and Sunnybrook & Women’s College Health Sciences Centre.

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