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133


Charting the future. Credentialing, privileging, quality, and evaluation in clinical ethics consultation

Dubler, Nancy Neveloff; Webber, Mayris P; Swiderski, Deborah M; [Berkowitz, Kenneth A]
Clinical ethics consultation has become an important resource, but unlike other health care disciplines, it has no accreditation or accepted curriculum for training programs, no standards for practice, and no way to measure effectiveness. The Clinical Ethics Credentialing Project was launched to pilot-test approaches to train, credential, privilege, and evaluate consultants.
PMID: 20050368
ISSN: 0093-0334
CID: 461072

Translating the IOM's "boldest recommendation" into accepted practice [Comment]

Wall, Stephen P; Dubler, Nancy N; Goldfrank, Lewis R
PMID: 19385320
ISSN: 1046-7890
CID: 111645

Success of organ donation after out-of-hospital cardiac death and the barriers to its acceptance [Comment]

Kaufman, Bradley J; Wall, Stephen P; Gilbert, Alexander J; Dubler, Nancy N; Goldfrank, Lewis R
It is well documented that transplants save lives and improve quality of life for patients suffering from kidney, liver, and heart failure. Uncontrolled donation after cardiac death (UDCD) is an effective and ethical alternative to existing efforts towards increasing the available pool of organs. However, people who die from an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest are currently being denied the opportunity to be organ donors except in those few locations where out-of-hospital UDCD programs are active, such as in Paris, Madrid, and Barcelona. Societies have the medical and moral obligation to develop UDCD programs
PMCID:2784370
PMID: 19825202
ISSN: 1466-609x
CID: 122673

Definitive care for the critically ill during a disaster: a framework for allocation of scarce resources in mass critical care: from a Task Force for Mass Critical Care summit meeting, January 26-27, 2007, Chicago, IL [Guideline]

Devereaux, Asha V; Dichter, Jeffrey R; Christian, Michael D; Dubler, Nancy N; Sandrock, Christian E; Hick, John L; Powell, Tia; Geiling, James A; Amundson, Dennis E; Baudendistel, Tom E; Braner, Dana A; Klein, Mike A; Berkowitz, Kenneth A; Curtis, J Randall; Rubinson, Lewis
BACKGROUND: Anticipated circumstances during the next severe influenza pandemic highlight the insufficiency of staff and equipment to meet the needs of all critically ill victims. It is plausible that an entire country could face simultaneous limitations, resulting in severe shortages of critical care resources to the point where patients could no longer receive all of the care that would usually be required and expected. There may even be such resource shortfalls that some patients would not be able to access even the most basic of life-sustaining interventions. Rationing of critical care in this circumstance would be difficult, yet may be unavoidable. Without planning, the provision of care would assuredly be chaotic, inequitable, and unfair. The Task Force for Mass Critical Care Working Group met in Chicago in January 2007 to proactively suggest guidance for allocating scarce critical care resources. TASK FORCE SUGGESTIONS: In order to allocate critical care resources when systems are overwhelmed, the Task Force for Mass Critical Care Working Group suggests the following: (1) an equitable triage process utilizing the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scoring system; (2) the concept of triage by a senior clinician(s) without direct clinical obligation, and a support system to implement and manage the triage process; (3) legal and ethical constructs underpinning the allocation of scarce resources; and (4) a mechanism for rapid revision of the triage process as further disaster experiences, research, planning, and modeling come to light.
PMID: 18460506
ISSN: 0012-3692
CID: 167105

Delivering care in a non-health-care space

Dubler, Nancy Neveloff
PMID: 23206828
ISSN: 1937-7010
CID: 1420582

Ethical Challenges of Patenting "Nature": Legal and Economic Accounts of Altered Nature as Property

Majumder, Mary Anderlik; Byrne, Margaret M; Bongmba, Elias; Rothenberg, Leslie S; Dubler, Nancy Neveloff; Lustig, BA; Brody, BA; McKenny, GP
ISI:000266872600005
ISSN: 0376-7418
CID: 1421312

The ethics of using quality improvement methods in health care

Lynn, Joanne; Baily, Mary Ann; Bottrell, Melissa; Jennings, Bruce; Levine, Robert J; Davidoff, Frank; Casarett, David; Corrigan, Janet; Fox, Ellen; Wynia, Matthew K; Agich, George J; O'Kane, Margaret; Speroff, Theodore; Schyve, Paul; Batalden, Paul; Tunis, Sean; Berlinger, Nancy; Cronenwett, Linda; Fitzmaurice, J Michael; Dubler, Nancy Neveloff; James, Brent
Quality improvement (QI) activities can improve health care but must be conducted ethically. The Hastings Center convened leaders and scholars to address ethical requirements for QI and their relationship to regulations protecting human subjects of research. The group defined QI as systematic, data-guided activities designed to bring about immediate improvements in health care delivery in particular settings and concluded that QI is an intrinsic part of normal health care operations. Both clinicians and patients have an ethical responsibility to participate in QI, provided that it complies with specified ethical requirements. Most QI activities are not human subjects research and should not undergo review by an institutional review board; rather, appropriately calibrated supervision of QI activities should be part of professional supervision of clinical practice. The group formulated a framework that would use key characteristics of a project and its context to categorize it as QI, human subjects research, or both, with the potential of a customized institutional review board process for the overlap category. The group recommended a period of innovation and evaluation to refine the framework for ethical conduct of QI and to integrate that framework into clinical practice.
PMID: 17438310
ISSN: 0003-4819
CID: 1420592

Credentialing ethics consultants: an invitation to collaboration [Comment]

Dubler, Nancy Neveloff; Blustein, Jeffrey
PMID: 17366189
ISSN: 1526-5161
CID: 1420602

Commentary on "Beyond Schiavo": beyond theory [Comment]

Dubler, Nancy Neveloff
PMID: 18320990
ISSN: 1046-7890
CID: 1420612

Handbook for health care ethics committees

Post, Linda Farber; Blustein, Jeffrey; Dubler, Nancy N
Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007
Extent: xiii, 327 p. ; 26 cm.
ISBN: 9780801884481
CID: 1421622