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Journals Perspectives in Biology and Me...

Perspectives in Biology and Medicine

https://read.qxmd.com/read/38662008/herd-immunity-history-concepts-and-ethical-rationale
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Davide Vecchi, Giorgio Airoldi
Public health emergencies are fraught by epistemic uncertainty, which raises policy issues of how to handle that uncertainty and devise sustainable public health responses. Among such responses, a herd immunity policy might be an option. Particularly before the development of vaccines, the current COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the polarized nature of the political debate concerning the ethical feasibility of herd immunity strategies. This article provides a conceptual framework tailored to uncover the ethical rationale behind such strategies...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38662007/amicus-brief
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christine M Korsgaard
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38662006/amicus-brief
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Martha C Nussbaum
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38662005/elephants-personhood-and-moral-status
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David DeGrazia
This essay uses the lens of moral status to explore the question of whether elephants ought to count as persons under the law. After distinguishing descriptive, moral, and legal concepts of personhood, the author argues that elephants are (descriptively) at least "borderline persons," justifying an attribution of full moral status and, thereby, a solid basis for legal personhood. A final section examines broad implications of elephant personhood.
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38662004/introduction-to-the-special-section
#25
EDITORIAL
Franklin G Miller
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38662003/erratum
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661942/what-is-light-in-dark-times
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sue E Estroff
Alisse Waterston and Charlotte Corden's Light in Dark Times (2020) began as an address by the president of the American Anthropological Association and was transformed into "a work of art and anthropology" by a member of the audience. The result was a coauthored book-length graphic essay that is expansive in subject matter, and in the representation of ideas, scholars, and questions about what it means to be human and how we will pass the time that is given us on earth. Light and dark are central to the visual representations that serve as the background to a story about what is necessary to become a person who is honest...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661941/conceptualizing-endometriosis-pain-through-metaphors
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julia M Abraham, Rajasekaran
Biomedical and philosophical traditions postulate the experience of pain either as quantifiable or as sociocultural phenomena. This critical assessment offers a close reading of Lara Parker's Vagina Problems: Endometriosis, Painful Sex, and Other Taboo Topics (2020) and Abby Norman's Ask Me About My Uterus: A Quest to Make Doctors Believe in Women's Pain (2018), analyzing the authors' use of language as a tool to comprehend and communicate pain. Norman's and Parker's memoirs narrate the lived experience of endometriosis, a condition diagnosed almost exclusively in women and characterized by chronic pain...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661940/science-in-the-public-mind-sources-and-consequences-of-antipathy
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
William H Woodruff
Public attitudes toward science in the United States can profoundly affect national well-being, and even national security. We live in a time when these attitudes are considerably more negative than usual. This critical assessment identifies a number of contributors to public antipathy toward science, some of which are intrinsic to the nature of science and as old as science itself, and some of which are external to science, have arisen recently, and may be unique to the present. Historic examples of scientific developments and challenges and two major current examples (the COVID-19 pandemic and anthropogenic climate change) illustrate the interplay of science and public attitudes and actions, and the development and consequences of antipathy toward science...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661939/2020-what-covid-taught-us-about-women-in-medicine
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alison M Heru
As Vice Chair of Clinical Services of Psychiatry at the University of Colorado, I choose to work where clinical services need most attention. As a woman, I want to show up where we can be seen and show up in the best possible way. Just as COVID began, I found myself doing clinical shifts in the newly created psychiatry emergency room. I became part of a front-line team, where "I" became "We," facing an unknown enemy. Not only was my work life upended, but my personal life was too, as I rushed to help my daughter, a medical student, care for her son when his day-care closed...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661938/accepting-and-embracing-our-mortality
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Larry R Churchill
Aging and death need to be seen as a single reality, aging-and-death. Separating them largely voids the lessons to be learned from aging, and the benefits of seeing life as a whole and learning a new sense of beauty, meaning, hope, and love. All the distinctive experiences central to our sense of ourselves as human beings are tied to recognition of our mortality. Living a full life means accepting and embracing death as not only inevitable, but necessary and desirable.
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661937/lives-cut-short-suicide-among-adolescent-females
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Meaghan Stacy, Jay Schulkin
Suicide is a worldwide public health issue, and suicide ideation and behavior among adolescents, females in particular, have been increasing. Focusing on the risk factors that are unique to adolescents and adolescent females can help tailor and inform prevention strategies. There are unique biological, psychological, social, and societal factors that contribute to suicide ideation and behavior among adolescent females. Some of these include hormonal fluctuations and sensitivity, developing brain systems, impacts of social media, maladaptive coping, and peer influence...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661936/on-antiscience-and-antisemitism
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter Hotez
Recent surges in antivaccine activism and other antiscience trends now converge with rising antisemitism. During the COVID-19 pandemic, authoritarian elements from the far right in North America and Europe often invoked Nazi imagery to describe vaccinations or at times even blame the Jewish people for COVID-19 origins and vaccine profiteering. Such tropes represent throwbacks to the 14th century, when European Jews were persecuted during the time of the bubonic plague. This article provides both historical and recent perspectives on the links between antiscience and antisemitism, together with the author's personal experience as a Jewish vaccine scientist targeted by both dark forces...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661935/bridging-divides-art-and-religion-in-the-early-aids-pandemic
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew Kelly
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, visual artists created a canon of work examining the illness experience of people living with AIDS. Largely forgotten today is a subset of this canon that simultaneously engaged AIDS narratives and religion, thereby dialoguing across political, cultural, and ideological divides. The artists who crafted these works created spaces of sanctioned discourse, drawing together sexual and religious histories in a manner reminiscent of the confessional as analyzed in Michel Foucault's work...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661934/placebos-and-metaphors
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Abraham Fuks
The objective of this essay is to develop the argument that placebos are a species of metaphor and to demonstrate that an analysis of the figurative trope can help us elucidate the power of the placebo response. The cognitive and embodied responses to both metaphors and placebos stem from the transfer of meaning between two domains, each with rich allusive properties that in turn depend on highly ramified and interconnected neural webs. Metaphors and placebos require an appropriate cultural backdrop for their linguistic and cognitive work and are dependent on shared social forms of life...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661933/publishing-biomedical-research-a-rapidly-evolving-ecosystem
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeffrey S Flier
The advancement of science requires the publication of research results so other scientists may examine, confirm, and build upon them, and the publishing ecosystem that mediates this process has undergone dramatic change over recent decades. This article takes a broad view of the biomedical research publishing system from its origins in the 17th century to the present day. It begins with a story from the author's lab that illustrates a scientist's complex interactions with the publishing system and then reviews the history, growth, and evolution of scientific publishing, including several recent disruptive developments: the digital transformation, the open access (OA) movement, the creation of "predatory journals," and the emergence of preprint archives...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661932/mycobacterial-death-and-resurrection-paradigm-shifts-in-disease-understanding
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chadi Cortas
This article examines two medical journal research articles on tuberculosis, one published in 1938 and the other in 2014. The two articles, which use animal models to understand aspects of tuberculosis mycobacteria survival in the lungs, rely on markedly different research and biotechnological techniques, reach somewhat opposite conclusions, and reflect different paradigms of tuberculosis pathogenesis: the 1938 article (indirectly invoking Koch's postulates) was written before the paradigm of so-called "latent" and "reactivation" tuberculosis became widely adopted, while the 2014 article (indirectly invoking the molecular equivalents to Koch's postulates) works within that paradigm but implicitly questions it...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661850/futures-of-care-care-technologies-and-graphic-medicine
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sathyaraj Venkatesan, Livine Ancy A
Assistive care technologies, developed to replace, support, or extend human capabilities and to address the surging demands of care, have been gaining prominence recently. The current trend summons a posthuman approach through decentering the privileged role of humans in several spaces of caregiving, such as hospitals and eldercare homes. The existence of these cutting-edge assistive technologies, exciting as they are, hints at a possible future when the distinction between humans and technology will be blurred, thus transforming care relations...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661849/futures-of-care-care-technologies-and-graphic-medicine
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sathyaraj Venkatesan, Livine Ancy A
Assistive care technologies, developed to replace, support, or extend human capabilities and to address the surging demands of care, have been gaining prominence recently. The current trend summons a posthuman approach through decentering the privileged role of humans in several spaces of caregiving, such as hospitals and eldercare homes. The existence of these cutting-edge assistive technologies, exciting as they are, hints at a possible future when the distinction between humans and technology will be blurred, thus transforming care relations...
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661848/imagine-this-happy-aging-in-america
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tia Powell
This essay explores what it means to age happily, beginning with concepts of aging and happiness and proceeding to factors that promote or undermine happy aging. Relationships, contribution, and personal growth all add value to an aging life. Community also matters, as does the acceptance that a happy older age requires neither perfect health nor immense wealth.
2023: Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
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