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  1. For Her Own Good: Protecting Women in Research.Evelyne Shuster - 1996 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 5 (3):346.
    In gender mythology woman is nature, the embodiment of life, destruction, and death. Semantically encoded in good and evil, the one conceptual stability woman represents is ambivalence. As a walled garden in which nature works its demonic sorcery, she turns a gob of refuse into a spreading web of sentient being, floating on the snaky umbilical by which she leashes every man. But as an ontological entity, woman is the real First Mover. The pregnant woman is devilishly complete. She needs (...)
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  • Love's Labor in the Health Care System: Working Toward Gender Equity.Rosemarie Tong - 2002 - Hypatia 17 (3):200-213.
    In this commentary on Eva Feder Kittay's Love's Labor: Essays on Women, Equality, and Dependency, I focus on Kittay's dependency theory. I apply this theory to an analysis of women's inadequate access to high-quality, cost-effective healthcare. I conclude that while quandaries remain unresolved, including getting men to do their share of dependency work, Kittay's book is an important and original contribution to feminist healthcare ethics and the development of a normative feminist ethic of care.
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  • Reproductive technology: A critical analysis of theological responses in christianity and Islam.Mohd Shuhaimi Bin Ishak & Sayed Sikandar Shah Haneef - 2014 - Zygon 49 (2):396-413.
    Reproductive medical technology has revolutionized the natural order of human procreation. Accordingly, some have celebrated its advent as a new and liberating determinant of kinship at the global level and advocate it as a right to reproductive health while others have frowned upon it as a vehicle for “guiltless exchange of sexual fluid” and commodification of human gametes. Religious voices from both Christianity and Islam range from unthinking adoption to restrictive use. While utilizing this technology to enable the married couple (...)
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  • Neural fetal tissue transplants: Old and new issues.Lois Margaret Nora & Mary B. Mahowald - 1996 - Zygon 31 (4):615-632.
    Neural fetal tissue transplantation offers promise as a treatment for devasting neurologic conditions such as Parkinson's disease. Two types of issues arise from this procedure: those associated with the use of fetuses, and those associated with the use of neural tissue. The former issues have been examined in many forums; the latter have not. This paper reviews issues and arguments raised by the use of fetal tissue in general, but focuses on the implications of the use of neural tissue for (...)
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  • (1 other version)iPLEDGE Allegiance to the Pill: Evaluation of Year 1 of a Birth Defect Prevention and Monitoring System.Toby L. Schonfeld, N. Jean Amoura & Christopher J. Kratochvil - 2009 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 37 (1):104-117.
    Following the widespread occurrence of birth defects from the use of thalidomide to treat nausea during pregnancy in the 1960s and 1970s, the Food and Drug Administration became particularly vigilant about the use of therapeutic agents during pregnancy and in women of childbearing potential. The FDA developed a list that categorizes an agent according to the known risks to a fetus. The drug thalidomide falls into Category X: agents that have demonstrated clear risk of fetal abnormalities and whose risks outweigh (...)
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  • (1 other version)iPLEDGE Allegiance to the Pill: Evaluation of Year 1 of a Birth Defect Prevention and Monitoring System.Toby L. Schonfeld, N. Jean Amoura & Christopher J. Kratochvil - 2009 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 37 (1):104-117.
    The United States Food and Drug Administration , in collaboration with pharmaceutical manufacturers, have recently implemented a heavily revised risk-management program for patients on isotretinoin , a drug with known and pronounced teratogenic effects. This revised risk management plan places significant burdens on both providers and patients in the hopes of achieving its goal of reducing fetal exposure to isotretinoin. The main focus of this paper is to discuss the burdens of various aspects of the program in relationship to potential (...)
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  • Book review. [REVIEW]Hilde Lindemann Nelson - 1995 - Journal of Value Inquiry 29 (4):112-116.
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  • Mary Mahowald: Bioethicist.D. Micah Hester - 2013 - The Pluralist 8 (3):122-132.
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  • Mary Mahowald: Removing Blinders and Crossing Boundaries.Jacquelyn Ann K. Kegley - 2013 - The Pluralist 8 (3):114-121.
    In what follows I will briefly address (1) Mahowald's work on Josiah Royce, (2) her advocacy for "cultural feminism" and its implications for American philosophy and work still to be done, (3) her promotion of a critical pragmatism and the need to provide a pragmatist critique not only of gender injustice but all forms of injustice, and (4) Mahowald's argument for the strategy of "standpoint theory," a strategy that offers great promise for future work in American philosophy.
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  • Disability? Long on the Agenda for Some Bioethicists.Mary B. Mahowald - 2001 - American Journal of Bioethics 1 (3):45-46.
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  • The Concept of Disability in Bioethics: Theoretical and Clinical Issues.David B. Resnik - 2001 - American Journal of Bioethics 1 (3):46-48.
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  • Book Review. [REVIEW]Hilde Lindemann Nelson - 1998 - Hypatia 13 (4):112-116.
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