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  1. Dr. Death? Professionalism, Virtue, and U.S. Physician Participation in the Death Penalty.Rebecca L. Walker - 2017 - Criminal Justice Ethics 36 (1):78-96.
    In the United States at present, the death penalty is a possible sentence in 31 out of 50 states, as well as within the military and for federal cases. In the U.S., numbers of executions are declin...
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  • Nurse participation in legal executions: An ethics round-table discussion.Linda Shields, Roger Watson, Philip Darbyshire, Hugh McKenna, Ged Williams, Catherine Hungerford, David Stanley, Ellen Ben-Sefer, Susan Benedict, Benny Goodman, Peter Draper & Judith Anderson - 2018 - Nursing Ethics 25 (7):841-854.
    A paper was published in 2003 discussing the ethics of nurses participating in executions by inserting the intravenous line for lethal injections and providing care until death. This paper was circulated on an international email list of senior nurses and academics to engender discussion. From that discussion, several people agreed to contribute to a paper expressing their own thoughts and feelings about the ethics of nurses participating in executions in countries where capital punishment is legal. While a range of opinions (...)
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  • Bioethical Boundaries, Critiques of Current Paradigms, and the Importance of Transparency.J. Clint Parker - 2022 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 47 (1):1-17.
    This issue of The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy is dedicated to topics in clinical ethics with essays addressing clinician participation in state sponsored execution, duties to decrease ecological footprints in medicine, the concept of caring and its relationship to conscientious refusal, the dilemmas involved in dual use research, a philosophical and practical critique of principlism, conundrums that arise when applying surrogate decision-making models to patients with moderate intellectual disabilities, the phenomenology of chronic disease, and ethical concerns surrounding the use (...)
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  • Drugs and the Death Penalty.Rebecca Dresser - 2014 - Hastings Center Report 44 (1):9-10.
    In October 2013, Missouri officials abandoned a plan to execute a convicted murderer using a novel method—an injection of propofol. The name of this drug became a household word after propofol played a role in singer Michael Jackson's death, but this has been a popular therapeutic drug for many years. Clinicians use it in intensive care, surgery, and common procedures like colonoscopy. After deciding to halt the execution, Missouri governor Jay Nixon told corrections officials to come up with a different (...)
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