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CQ Sources/Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 August 2006

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Extract

These CQ Sources were compiled by Bette Anton.

Type
SPECIAL SECTION: BIOETHICS AND WAR
Copyright
© 2006 Cambridge University Press

How complicit are doctors in abuses of detainees? [Comment]. Lancet 2004;364:637–8.

Preventing war through non-violent direct involvement in conflict: I. Principles and background. Medicine, Conflict, and Survival 2001;17:309–22.

Annas GJ. Unspeakably cruel—Torture, medical ethics, and the law. New England Journal of Medicine 2005;352:2127–32.

Arya N, Zurbrigg S. Operation infinite injustice: Impact of sanctions and prospective war on the people of Iraq. Canadian Journal of Public Health 2003;94:9–12.

Atlas RM. Biodefense research: An emerging conundrum. Current Opinion in Biotechnology 2005;16:239–42.

Baer HU, Gilgen P. Experiences of the course. International Course on the Law of Armed Conflict. Military Medicine 2002;167(Suppl.):32–3.

Bloche MG, Marks JH. Doctors and interrogators at Guantanamo Bay. New England Journal of Medicine 2005;353:6–8.

Bloche MG, Marks JH. When doctors go to war. New England Journal of Medicine 2005;352:3–6.

Breithaupt H. Science and war. The conflict in the Middle East has started a discussion in academic circles about the responsibility of scientists in times of political turmoil. EMBO Reports 2002;3:596–8.

Cohen E. Bioethics in wartime. New Atlantis 2003;3:23–33.

Cohen SP. Doctors and interrogation. New England Journal of Medicine 2005;353:1633–4.

DeMaria AN. The physician and war. Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2003;41:889–90.

Deutscher M. The responsibility to protect. Medicine, Conflict, and Survival 2005;21:28–34.

Eckenwiler L. Ethics and the underpinnings of policy in biodefense and emergency preparedness. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2005;14:306–15; discussion 16–21.

Forge J. The morality of weapons research. Science and Engineering Ethics 2004;10:531–42.

Geiderman JM. Ethics seminars: Physician complicity in the Holocaust: Historical review and reflections on emergency medicine in the 21st century, part I. Academic Emergency Medicine 2002;9:223–31.

Geiderman JM. Ethics seminars: Physician complicity in the Holocaust: Historical review and reflections on emergency medicine in the 21st century, part II. Academic Emergency Medicine 2002;9:232–40.

Gross ML. Bioethics and armed conflict: Mapping the moral dimensions of medicine and war. Hastings Center Report 2004;34:22–30.

Gross ML. Physician-assisted draft evasion: Civil disobedience, medicine, and war. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2005;14:444–54.

Harding-Pink D. Humanitarian medicine: Up the garden path and down the slippery slope. BMJ (Clinical Research ed.) 2004;329:398–9.

Hemmings R. “The blameless physician”: Narrative and pain, Sassoon and Rivers. Literature and Medicine 2005;24:109–26.

Howe EG. Dilemmas in military medical ethics since 9/11. Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 2003;13:175–88.

Jones JW, McCullough LB, Richman BW. The military physician's ethical response to evidence of torture. Surgery 2004;136:1090–3.

Kaebnick GE. How to think about stemming an insurgency. Hastings Center Report 2004;34:2.

Lee PR, Conant M, Jonsen AR, Heilig S. Participation in torture and interrogation: An inexcusable breach of medical ethics [Perspective]. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2006;15:202–3.

Lifton RJ. Doctors and torture. New England Journal of Medicine 2004;351:415–6.

Lim MK. Hostile use of the life sciences. New England Journal of Medicine 2005;353:2214–5.

Marks JH. Doctors of interrogation. Hastings Center Report 2005;35:17–22.

McManus J, Mehta SG, McClinton AR, De Lorenzo RA, Baskin TW. Informed consent and ethical issues in military medical research. Academic Emergency Medicine 2005;12:1120–6.

Meier BM. International criminal prosecution of physicians: A critique of Professors Annas and Grodin's proposed International Medical Tribunal. American Journal of Law & Medicine 2004;30:419–52.

Miles SH. Abu Ghraib: Its legacy for military medicine. Lancet 2004;364:725–9.

Miller EJ. Doctors and torture. New England Journal of Medicine 2004;351:1571–4.

Moreno JD. Bioethics and the national security state. Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 2004;32:198–208.

Moreno JD. Medical ethics and non-lethal weapons. American Journal of Bioethics 2004;4:W1–2.

Moreno JD. The medical exam as political humiliation. American Journal of Bioethics 2004;4:W20.

Moreno JD. Wartime medical ethics. Hastings Center Report 2005;35:7.

Nie JB. The West's dismissal of the Khabarovsk trial as “communist propaganda”: Ideology, evidence and international bioethics. Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 2004;1:32–42.

O'Connor MJ. Bearing true faith and allegiance? Allowing recovery for soldiers under fire in military experiments that violate the Nuremberg Code. Suffolk Transnational Law Review 2002;25:649–86.

Okie S. Glimpses of Guantanamo—Medical ethics and the war on terror. New England Journal of Medicine 2005;353:2529–34.

Reis S, Spenser T. Medicine and the Holocaust—Lessons for present and future physicians. British Journal of General Practice 2003;53:78–9.

Roelcke V. Nazi medicine and research on human beings. Lancet 2004;364(Suppl 1):s6–7.

Singh JA. American physicians and dual loyalty obligations in the “war on terror.” BMC Medical Ethics 2003;4:E4.

Singh JA, DePellegrin TL. Images of war and medical ethics. BMJ (Clinical Research ed.) 2003;326:774–5.

Summerfield D. Effects of war: Moral knowledge, revenge, reconciliation, and medicalised concepts of “recovery.” BMJ (Clinical Research ed.) 2002;325:1105–7.

Sutton V. A multidisciplinary approach to an ethic of biodefense and bioterrorism. Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 2005;33:310–22.

Temme LA. Ethics in human experimentation: The two military physicians who helped develop the Nuremberg Code. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine 2003;74:1297–300.

Thompson SK. The legality of the use of psychiatric neuroimaging in intelligence interrogation. Cornell Law Review 2005;90:1601–37.

Tobin J. The challenges and ethical dilemmas of a military medical officer serving with a peacekeeping operation in regard to the medical care of the local population. Journal of Medical Ethics 2005;31:571–4.

Trotter G. Loyalty in the trenches: Practical teleology for office clinicians responding to terrorism. Journal of Medicine & Philosophy 2004;29:389–416.

Tschudin V, Schmitz C. The impact of conflict and war on international nursing and ethics. Nursing Ethics 2003;10:354–67.

Wells RJ. Wartime medical ethics. Hastings Center Report 2005;35:7.

Wilks M. A stain on medical ethics. Lancet 2005;366:429–31.

Wynia MK, Gostin LO. Ethical challenges in preparing for bioterrorism: Barriers within the health care system. American Journal of Public Health 2004;94:1096–102.