Clinical Ethics Research
Many ethical issues arise in the conduct of medical care, especially in hospital intensive care units and with the advanced technologies of modern medicine. As medical technologies improve, so do options for managing healthcare, forcing some patients and healthcare professionals to make difficult treatment decisions. Clinical ethicists seek to improve patient care by combining the perspectives of healthcare professionals, patients and families to help when facing difficult treatment decisions. Our center’s clinical ethicists provide this service in a consultative capacity to three premier institutions in the Texas Medical Center, as well as conducting original research in this realm.
Our current research in this area examines ethical issues arising in the clinical setting, such as moral distress. Moral distress occurs when health care professionals cannot carry out what they believe to be ethically appropriate actions because of external (institutional) or internal (personal) constraints.
Current Projects
- Ethical and Human Factors Impacting Successful Translation of Perceptual Computing to Improve Clinical Care
- Ethical Perspectives Towards Using Smart Contracts for Patient Consent and Data Protection of Digital Phenotype Data in Machine Learning Environments
- Ethically Responsible Choice Architecture in Medical Decision Making
- Integrating Ethics into the Science of Behavior Change: An Ethical Framework for Clinicians and Policymaker
- A Multi-Site Trial to Test Benefits of Adding a Personalized Risk Calculator to an Online Decision Aid for Left Ventricular Assist Device
Our Research Partners
The Center for Medical Ethics and Health Policy continues to expand its research efforts with partnerships and support of various government and private institutions including the National Institutes for Heath, the Greenwall Foundation, Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute, the Houston Methodist Hospital and the Houston Methodist Research Institute.