by John McMillan | Apr 25, 2025 | Ethics
Jacques Wels, UCL and Natasia Hamarat, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB) Euthanasia has been legal in Belgium since mid-2002, and in the past two decades, the number of reported cases has risen sharply. In 2003, only 236 cases were recorded, but by 2023, this had...
by John McMillan | Apr 25, 2025 | COVID-19, Ethics
Dr. Phlip McMillan, John McMillan Floating within the gut are microscopic saboteurs: misfolded proteins gone rogue that silently sneak into the brain, corrupting it’s intricate machinery. These prion proteins spark chain reactions, turning neighbouring molecules into...
by John McMillan | Apr 18, 2025 | COVID-19, Ethics
Dr. Phlip McMillan, John McMillan How does a doctor who reportedly saved every COVID-19 patient under his care end up facing a professional tribunal? This isn’t a hypothetical question. It’s the reality for Dr. Shankara Chetty, a clinician from a...
by John McMillan | Apr 4, 2025 | COVID-19, Ethics
Dr. Phlip McMillan, John McMillan In April 2021, Dr. Charles Hoffe of Lytton, Canada wrote a letter to Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry expressing serious concerns about COVID-19 vaccine injuries he was observing in his patients. Instead of investigating...
by admin | Mar 21, 2025 | COVID-19, Ethics, Policy
Dylan Thomas Doyle, University of Colorado Boulder In the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers struggled to grasp the rate of the virus’s spread and the number of related deaths. While hospitals tracked cases and deaths within their walls, the broader...
by admin | Mar 7, 2025 | Ethics, Mental Health
Lynda Boothroyd, Durham University What we think of as “normal” body shape is affected by what we’re accustomed to – the range of body shapes we see. My new research with colleagues shows that this is true for young children as well as adults. Research with adults and...
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