Author / Monica Delles

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  • Myra Christopher Named to Starr Hall of Fame

    Myra Christopher Named to Starr Hall of Fame Myra Christopher, the Center’s founding director and current Kathleen Foley Chair in Pain and Palliative Care at the Center for Practical Bioethic joined the ranks of seven of Kansas City’s best citizens on March 13, 2015, when she will be inducted into the inaugural class of the Starr…
  • Case Study – The Role of Literacy in Making Wishes Known

    Where is Will Rogers when we need him most?
    Toward a traditional morality in biomedical ethics.

  • Terri Schiavo — Five Years Later

    Reflections on the Terri Schiavo case.

  • The Affordable Care Act and Brain Injuries

    Brain injured patients don’t follow a schedule for recovery.

  • The Best Care Possible

    The way Americans die in this country is a national disgrace, according to Dr. Ira Byock in his new book, The Best Care Possible: A Physician’s Quest to Transform Care through the End of Life.

  • The Affordable Care Act Impact on US Hospitals

    John Bluford, president and CEO of Truman Medical Centers in Kansas City, explains the mounting challenges U.S. hospitals face with the implementation of the Affordable Care Act.

  • The Challenges of Caregiving

    An estimated 120 million adult Americans (57 percent) are either providing unpaid care to an adult family member or friend or have provided this care in the past.

  • The Courts and Medical Futility

    Thaddeus Pope, director of the Health Law Institute and an Associate Professor of Law at Hamline University School of Law in Saint Paul, Minnesota, co-authored an article in the Journal of the American Medical Association entitled “The Courts, Futility and the Ends of Medicine.”

  • The Cruzan Family 20 Years Later

    Twenty years after Nancy Cruzan died following years of litigation and public strife over the right to withdraw life-sustaining treatment, Nancy’s sister Chris Cruzan White and her two daughters, Angie Broaddus and Miranda Lewis, look back and at what lay ahead.

  • The Elderly and Public Transportation

    By 2015, more than 15.5 million Americans are expected to live in communities where public transportation is poor or nonexistent.

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