Remove Bioethics Remove Informed Consent Remove Presentation
article thumbnail

A Precautionary Approach to Touch in Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy

Bill of Health

attempt to complexify the notion of consent in altered states by presenting contradictory assertions that patients can be more authentic in altered states (enhanced capacity for consent) and that they can become regressed (increased need for touch but impaired capacity for consent). McLane et al.

Bioethics 359
article thumbnail

Introductory Editorial — Critical Psychedelic Studies: Correcting the Hype

Bill of Health

In place of this purely “anti-psychedelic” critique, Langlitz notes that the present discourse of critical “anti-hype” had been initiated by “forces within ” the psychedelic field, as scholars and activists raise concerns about the ethical and political impact of psychedelic medicalization and its capitalistic roots. (I

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

New Portable MRI Revolutionizing Brain Research Demands Ethical and Legal Innovation

Bill of Health

Our answers are presented in the new JLB article, Ethical, Legal, and Policy Challenges in Field-Based Neuroimaging Research Using Emerging Portable MRI Technologies: Guidance for Investigators and for Oversight.

article thumbnail

Responding to the Comeback of He Jiankui, ‘The CRISPR Baby Scientist’: Lessons from Criminal Justice Theory

Bill of Health

He Jiankui’s Controversial Comeback Fast forward to the present. As a result, Dr. He was sentenced to three years in prison and was fined three million Chinese yuan ($429,000). Since being released from prison in April 2022, Dr. He has been staging a comeback.

article thumbnail

What the Law and Bioethics Tell Us About Synthetic Human Embryos

Bill of Health

At present, researchers can keep these synthetic humanoid organisms alive for almost nine days; the mouse version can be kept alive for twelve days, half the full mice gestation period, which might translate to four and a half months in humans. So far, no country has adopted this rule. The original article can be found here.

Bioethics 303