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  1. Ethical Challenges of Advances in Vaccine Delivery Technologies.Arthur L. Caplan, Kyle Ferguson & Anne Williamson - 2024 - Hastings Center Report 54 (1):13-15.
    Strategies to address misinformation and hesitancy about vaccines, including the fear of needles, and to overcome obstacles to access, such as the refrigeration that some vaccines demand, strongly suggest the need to develop new vaccine delivery technologies. But, given widespread distrust surrounding vaccination, these new technologies must be introduced to the public with the utmost transparency, care, and community involvement. Two emerging technologies, one a skin‐patch vaccine and the other a companion dye and detector, provide excellent examples of greatly improved (...)
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  • Toward a paradigm shift: corrective trust as a pathway to mitigate biases in healthcare and beyond.Ju Zhang - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
    In this paper, I explore the concept of corrective trust as a pathway to mitigate biases, and potentially build or restore mutual trust in relationships characterized by power imbalances, particularly within the context of healthcare. Corrective trust takes place when we actively choose to trust others when our initial mistrust or hesitation to trust is due to biases. However, existing accounts of trust as a special form of reliance present challenges to practicing corrective trust. I propose a non-reductive account that (...)
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  • Qualitative Metascience: A Framework for Cultivating Healthier and More Translationally Impactful Neuroscience-Neuroethics Research Ecosystems.Rachel Asher - forthcoming - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience.
    Navigating the demands of translational research requires not only addressing scientific issues, but also managing conflicting sociopolitical, cultural, psychosocial, epistemic, and ethical relationships across diverse communities and academic disciplines. Data and analysis of intensive interviews on these phenomena with researchers are presented here, which led to the co-design of a larger, ongoing study in a neuropsychiatric research community. The results generated a set of hypotheses—particularly regarding conflicts and challenges at the neuroscience-neuroethics interface as experienced by neuroscientists—which have not been fully (...)
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