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  1. Helping doctors become better doctors: Mary Lobjoit—an unsung heroine of medical ethics in the UK.Margaret R. Brazier, Raanan Gillon & John Harris - 2012 - Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (6):383-385.
    Medical Ethics has many unsung heros and heroines. Here we celebrate one of these and on telling part of her story hope to place modern medical ethics and bioethics in the UK more centrally within its historical and human contex.
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  • Reflections on learning and teaching medical ethics in UK medical schools.Gordon M. Stirrat - 2015 - Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (1):8-11.
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  • Fifty years of medical ethics: from the London Medical Group to the Institute of Medical Ethics.Edward Shotter, Margaret Lloyd, Roger Higgs & Kenneth Boyd - 2013 - Journal of Medical Ethics 39 (11):662-666.
    The history of the Institute of Medical Ethics has been well recorded. Accounts of its origins in the London Medical Group were published in an academic paper of 2003,1 in the transcript of a Wellcome Witnesses to Twentieth Century Medicine Seminar in 20072 and in a chapter of the 2009 Cambridge World History of Medical Ethics.3 In 2013, 50 years since the inauguration of its first series of lectures and symposia, the LMG as an organisation no longer exists, but its (...)
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  • Guest editorial: a tribute to the Very Reverend Edward Shotter.Raanan Gillon, Kenneth Boyd, Margaret Brazier, Alastair Campbell, Andrew Goddard, Wing May Kong, Sylvia Limerick, Stephen Lock & Jonathan Montgomery - 2019 - Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (10):629-630.
    We wish to describe and acknowledge the exceptional contributions to medical ethics, both in the UK and internationally, made by Edward Shotter1 who died at home on 3 July 2019. He was founder of the London Medical Group2 3 and instigator of similar student-led medical ethics groups throughout the UK; founder of the Institute of Medical Ethics4 and founder of the Journal of Medical Ethics. Ted Shotter transformed the study of medical ethics in the UK in the interests of patients (...)
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  • Whatever happened to medical politics?N. Emmerich - 2011 - Journal of Medical Ethics 37 (10):631-636.
    This paper argues the case for coming to see ‘medical politics’ as a topic or subject within medical education. First, its absence is noted from the wide array of paramedical subjects (medical ethics, history of medicine, the medical humanities, etc) currently given attention in both the medical education literature and in specific curricula. Second the author suggests that ‘the political’ is implicitly recognisable in the historical roots of medical ethics education, specifically in certain of the London Medical Group's activities, and (...)
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  • Research Ethics Committees: The Business of Society and Medicine.Nathan Emmerich - 2009 - Research Ethics 5 (4):154-156.
    Whilst Colin Parker and I are in broad disagreement we would nevertheless agree that RECs have both political and ethical functions, albeit to differing degrees, and that a proper account of ethical expertise needs to be given. The uses RECs make of ethical experts and expertise and the way in which this might be recognised remains, from my perspective, open for debate. My only conclusion is that it should be recognised.
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