| Literature DB >> 24297296 |
John D Loike1, Brittany S Rush, Adam Schweber, Ruth L Fischbach.
Abstract
Columbia University offers two innovative undergraduate science-based bioethics courses for student majoring in biosciences and pre-health studies. The goals of these courses are to introduce future scientists and healthcare professionals to the ethical questions they will confront in their professional lives, thus enabling them to strategically address these bioethical dilemmas. These courses incorporate innovative pedagogical methods, case studies, and class discussions to stimulate the students to think creatively about bioethical issues emerging from new biotechnologies. At the end of each course, each student is required to submit a one-page strategy detailing how he or she would resolve a bioethical dilemma. Based on our experience in teaching these courses and on a qualitative analysis of the students' reflections, we offer recommendations for creating an undergraduate science-based course in bioethics. General recommendations include: 1) integrating the science of emerging biotechnologies, their ethical ramifications, and contemporary bioethical theories into interactive class sessions; 2) structuring discussion-based classes to stimulate students to consider the impact of their moral intuitions when grappling with bioethical issues; and 3) using specific actual and futuristic case studies to highlight bioethical issues and to help develop creative problem-solving skills. Such a course sparks students' interests in both science and ethics and helps them analyze bioethical challenges arising from emerging biotechnologies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24297296 PMCID: PMC3846520 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.13-01-0012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Topics for Ethics for Biomedical Engineers and Crossroads in Bioethicsa
| Stem cell technology |
| Patenting genesb |
| Human trafficking |
| Organ trafficking |
| The science and ethics of human cloning |
| Reproductive medicine: IVF, genetic screening, recruiting egg donors, and preimplantation genetics |
| Medical tourism |
| Participation of physicians in executions using lethal injections |
| The science of romance and behavioral genetics |
| Alternative medicine |
| Ethics of disaster medicine |
| Human–animal chimeras |
| Global bioethics: respecting culture and religion |
| Cell phones, electromagnetic radiation, and their ethical consequencesb |
| Informed consent for the uneducated |
| Bioterrorism |
| Nanotechnologyb |
| Brain imaging technologiesb |
| Regulating biomedical research |
aThis list represents topics taught over the years in both courses; not all topics are taught each year in each course.
bTopics offered only in Ethics for Biomedical Engineers.
Assignment frequency and portion of final grade
| Weekly | Write a one-page response to a thought question about bioethical concerns emerging from a new biotechnology. | 10 |
| Semester | Attend a minimum of two bioethics or scientific seminars at Columbia University and write a one-page review of an innovative thought or idea obtained from the seminar. | Not graded |
| Semester | Midterm: write a 1000-word op-ed piece in the appropriate format for submission to the | 30 |
| Semester | Final exam paper: write a three- to five-page paper analyzing the bioethical ramifications of a scientific biotechnology paper published within the past 6 mo and discuss specific approaches on how to resolve said bioethical dilemmas. | 30 |
| Semester | Write a one-page summary of personal ethics decision-making strategy to resolve bioethical challenges. | Not graded |
| Semester | Class participation: contribution to debates, role-playing, and discussions, including class attendance. | 30 |
Figure 1.The factors that students (n = 139) identified in developing strategies to resolve bioethical challenges. See Table 3 for a list of all key words and phrases from student responses (coded-response themes).
Factors students considered in developing bioethical strategiesa
| Coded-response themes | |
|---|---|
| One or more bioethical principles | Autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice |
| Need for interdisciplinary approach | Inclusion of diverse backgrounds, disciplines, and values; understand different sides of argument and points of views; act as devil's advocate |
| Social factors | Taking the current social/cultural environmental/religious context into account |
| Science and technology | Understanding the relevant science and technology |
| Moral intuition | Biases, intuition, moral/ethical compass, impulse, and gut instincts—how these factor into decision-making |
| No right or wrong | Gray areas, no right or wrong answers to all/some bioethical dilemmas |
| Multiple strategies | Multiple/many strategies or no single strategy; no set of rules; no standardization that can be applied to all bioethical issues |
| Utilitarian framework | Utilitarianism: benefit most, harm least; greatest good for the greatest number of people |
| Technological innovation as means of resolving bioethical dilemmas | Technological/scientific innovation can sometimes solve ethical dilemmas |
aOne student's response was eliminated from the analysis because it did not follow the prompt (it consisted entirely of a personal anecdote).
Figure 2.Bioethical principles cited in student responses and significant differences between students who had various proportions of class time for discussion. Cohort 2 (n = 62), years 2011 and 2012, with 75% class time devoted to discussion articulated all four bioethical principles at greater frequency than cohort 1 (n = 77), years 2008 and 2009, with only 25% class time devoted to discussion.