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Bioethics
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What is Bioethics?

Bioethics is the systematic study of ethical questions arising from advances in medicine, biology, and health care. It appears across disciplines including nursing, pre-law, philosophy, and public health policy, making it one of the most cross-curricular subjects in undergraduate and graduate study. What makes bioethics academically compelling is the tension it exposes between core principles—such as patient autonomy, the sanctity of life, and the ethics of treatment—and the real-world pressures of clinical practice, legislation, and social responsibility. Topics like euthanasia, stem cell research, human cloning, genetic engineering, surrogacy, and reproductive ethics force students to engage with questions where scientific possibility and moral obligation frequently conflict.

The papers collected here take several distinct approaches. Many focus on specific ethical dilemmas within nursing and health care settings, analyzing how principles play out at the patient level. Others adopt a policy lens, examining how bioethical concerns shape health legislation and social responsibility frameworks. Analytical papers apply established ethical theories—most notably utilitarianism, as seen in work addressing euthanasia through the lens of Peter Singer's arguments—while some essays take comparative or multi-sided approaches, weighing competing moral positions on issues such as stem cell research or animal cruelty. A smaller number situate bioethical questions within religious frameworks, including Christian values.

A strong bioethics essay begins with a clearly scoped thesis that commits to a specific issue and a defensible moral position rather than surveying the field broadly. Evidence drawn from clinical cases, established ethical principles, and legal or policy precedents carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating personal opinion with reasoned argument; grounding every claim in a coherent ethical framework keeps analysis rigorous and persuasive.

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Thesis Doctorate
Nociceptive Pain in End-Of-Life
The difference between these articles and that of the two quoted studies is several-fold. Firstly, both McMillan and Small (2007) and Rosedale and Fu (2010) feature a certain disease - cancer – and described reduction of pain in connection with that. Ferrell and Coyles (2010), on the other hand, was more general, drawing up lists of drugs that are allegedly helpful in reducing pain, describing these drugs, and using their research studies to advice patients on all matters related to these drugs including their limitations. Tables, too, generously sprinkle their commentary and categorize the information in clear form. Ferrell and Coyles (2010), therefore, provided their readers with a descriptive meta-analytic study that was intended for the informative intent of caregivers (and patients). Readers are accorded the information of the various drugs available to them for relieving their pain (or the pain of patients). All necessary details are also provided so that readers can know when to best apply them.
Research Paper Doctorate
Congressional action and policies towards stem cell research
¶ … foundationally promising research discoveries of the twentieth century is Stem Cell Biology. Only announced as a possible scientific breakthrough in late 1998, significant research has begun on stem cells, yet even…
Essay Doctorate
Bonnie Steinbock's argument for ethical defensibility of selective abortion in Down syndrome screening
This is an argumentative paper on the defensibility of prenatal genetic testing, followed by selective abortion, for disabilities, such as Down's Syndrome and other serious disabilities. Bonnie Sternbock refutes the 5 grounds against the practice and concludes that a woman diagnosed with a disabled child can choose between keeping or preventing it.
Paper Undergraduate
Organ allocation ethics in substance abuse cases
The paper is asks and answers whether or not people who abuse their bodies should be allowed to receive organ transplants. The student is asked to approach this subject from a variety of perspectives. The student is asked to approach this topic from a bioethical perspective with respect to medicine and health. Finally the student must make his/her own ethical stand on the matter.
Research Paper Doctorate
Respect and Its Impact on the Lifespan of People of All Ages
Historically, the life span or longevity of the human being has been the focus of the studies of anthropologists. However, in more contemporary times the field of psychology has realized the inherent impact that…
Research Paper Doctorate
Fallacy Fallacious Thinking -- Appeals
Fallacious Thinking -- Appeals to Authority and Ignorance, and the False Analogy
Research Paper Doctorate
Comparing and Contrasting Two Right to Die Cases
The very public, legal and ultimately political saga of Terri Schiavo brought not only national but international attention to the right to die issues and echoed a similar battle which took place some fifteen years…
Thesis Undergraduate
Belmont Report to the Case of Henrietta
¶ … Belmont Report to the case of Henrietta Lacks and how they were violated
Research Paper Doctorate
Controversial biological issues and debates
Controversial Bioethical Issues of the Modern Era
Paper Doctorate
Ethics Case Study: To Rescue Others What
The ethical dilemma in this situation involves choosing whether one is willing to risk his or her own life with the purpose of saving the lives of others. The fact that the person in charge of this decision is in a safe…