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Showing posts from March, 2014

Health Care is Like Katz’s Deli

Sometime during the last year of the second millennium, I wrote my last letter in response to the last letter I have ever received. It’s been email ever since. I don’t recall making a conscious decision to stop writing letters. It just happened. I cannot pinpoint the exact date when my work memos, agendas, proposals and various notes, disappeared from my desk as if swallowed whole by my laptop. They just did. I still have lots of papers lying around, but I recently noticed that I don’t have any pens. Now, I will let you in on a little secret. I can’t type. I have written tens of thousands of lines of code, thousands of emails, business plans, presentations, contracts, white papers and blogs, typing with one finger. I like it this way. I use everything Microsoft Office has to offer, but only ten percent of functionality, or maybe even less, and I use it all day long. I don’t know anybody that uses computers the way I do. There are times when I have to interact with proprietary software

Is the Nuremberg Code Obsolete?

Long ago and far away, at the conclusion of a worldwide armed conflict, the winning side was shaken to its moral core by the discovery that massive and cruel medical experimentation has been routinely conducted on human beings.  The perpetrators were brought to trial and the verdict included not just punishment for the guilty, but also a message for posterity intended to prevent future atrocities. It was a code of ethics, very brief and written in plain language, and it was named after the city where the trials were held. The Nuremberg Code eventually became the basis for U.S. federal laws governing research on human subjects and known today as the Common Rule . The first article of the Nuremberg Code is about consent: “The voluntary consent of the human subject is absolutely essential.  This means that the person involved should have legal capacity to give consent; should be so situated as to be able to exercise free power of choice, without the intervention of any element of force,