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Ian D. Wolfe [5]Ian Wolfe [2]
  1.  19
    Our Next Pandemic Ethics Challenge? Allocating “Normal” Health Care Services.Jeremy R. Garrett, Leslie Ann McNolty, Ian D. Wolfe & John D. Lantos - 2020 - Hastings Center Report 50 (3):79-80.
    The pandemic creates unprecedented challenges to society and to health care systems around the world. Like all crises, these provide a unique opportunity to rethink the fundamental limiting assumptions and institutional inertia of our established systems. These inertial assumptions have obscured deeply rooted problems in health care and deflected attempts to address them. As hospitals begin to welcome all patients back, they should resist the temptation to go back to business as usual. Instead, they should retain the more deliberative, explicit, (...)
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  2.  7
    Beyond the consult question: Nurse ethicists as architects of moral spaces.Ian D. Wolfe - 2023 - Nursing Ethics 30 (5):710-719.
    Nurse Ethicists bring a unique perspective to clinical ethics consultation. This perspective provides an appreciation of ethical tensions that will exist beyond the consult question into the moral space of patient care. These tensions exist even when an ethically preferable plan of action is identified. Ethically appropriate courses of action can still lead to moral dilemmas for others. The nurse ethicist provides a lens well suited to identify and respond to these dilemmas. The nurse–patient relationship is the ethical foundation of (...)
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  3.  7
    Balancing Conscience: A Response to Fernandes & Ecret.Ian Wolfe & Maryam Guiahi - 2020 - Conatus 5 (1):101.
    There are many lessons that bioethics can learn from the Holocaust. Forefront are the lessons from the Nuremberg trials and the formation of research ethics. An often-overlooked lesson is how the Nazi regime was able to construct a hierarchy in such a way that influenced people to act in horrendous ways. Fernandes & Ecret, writing in Conatus – Journal of Philosophy 4, no. 2, highlight the influence of hierarchy on the moral silence of nurses and physicians within the Nazi regime. (...)
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  4.  5
    On “Not Recommending” ECMO.Ian D. Wolfe - 2020 - Hastings Center Report 50 (5):5-6.
    The neonatologist was describing the dire situation, the complexity of the fetus's anomalies, and the options—comfort care, some resuscitation—and finished by saying, “We would not recommend ECMO …” “We would not recommend” is a curious phrase. There is something ambiguous, very nebulous about it, something passive, noncommittal, maybe even deflective. As a bioethics researcher, I wondered how this phrase is interpreted, how it influences parents' moral deliberation over their options.
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  5.  11
    Responding to Parental Objections Over Testing for Death by Neurologic Criteria.Ian D. Wolfe - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (1):94-95.
    Navigating tragic circumstances in pediatrics requires consideration of parental grief responses. We meet parents where they are, not where we might want them to be. Different parents grieve differ...
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    The boy in the intensive care unit.Ian Wolfe - 2016 - Nursing Ethics 23 (8):932-934.
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  7.  8
    When Clinicians Marginalize Decision-Makers.Ian D. Wolfe - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (6):26-28.
    Caruso Brown brings forward an argument that clinicians and ethicists have a duty to consider decision-makers marginalized by hierarchical structures. The author presents a pragmatic approac...
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