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Society of Bioethics and Medicine
- Jun 10
- 2 min
Cuban Cuts Costs- The Online Pharmacy Changing Medicine
Written by Pooja Suganthan Edited by Elizabeth Badalov “Shark Tank” billionaire Mark Cuban has started a low-cost online pharmacy. The Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Company (MCCPDC) seeks to sell common prescription medications at a discounted price. On the Cost Plus website, Cuban advertises that "Everyone should have safe, affordable medicines with transparent prices.” The home page displays generic drugs at significantly discounted rates. For example, Imatinib, the generic ver


Society of Bioethics and Medicine
- May 9
- 6 min
A Life Better Lived
Written by Nishanth Araveti Edited by Pooja Suganthan “A man should be mourned at his birth, not at his death” Writing in the 18th century, it was Baron De Montesquieu who argued that the tally sheet of existence boils down to a negative number– life it seemed was better left unlived than forced to endure the slog of being. By and large though, we agree that existence is a positive experience worth living despite the many hurdles of everyday life. How then, do we begin to jud


Society of Bioethics and Medicine
- Apr 25
- 4 min
The Real Impact Being Constantly “Hangry” has on the Development of Societies
Written by Laila Gad Edited by Sanjana Ahmed “You’re not you when you’re hungry,” a phrase well ingrained in our minds after watching hundreds of Snickers commercials. But, it is true. After sitting in a three-hour lecture, the term “hangry,” referring to being “bad-tempered or irritable as a result of hunger,” becomes all too familiar. Essentially, you lose all sense of control: you forget how to think before you speak, you’re highly irritable, and you make rash decisions, a


Society of Bioethics and Medicine
- Apr 13
- 2 min
Medical Mistakes
Written by Aisha Abid Edited by Faith Singh Do physicians have any ethical responsibility to inform patients regarding medical errors? Medical errors can occur inadvertently and may or may not affect the patient depending on a variety of conditions. A mistake might cause a misdiagnosis or a negative adverse effect in the patient's condition. These mistakes can occur for various reasons such as, the pressure to check a large number of patients in a short amount of time, a lac


Society of Bioethics and Medicine
- Apr 4
- 4 min
The Potential of Pig Hearts to Save Humans
Written by Jonathan Gao Edited by Elizabeth Badalov Picture this: you lie in a small examination room as the physician performs the same old physical examination. The thin hospital gown, which never fits well anyways, is draped clumsily over you. A loosely-fit cannula hangs around your nose to help supplement oxygen; your breathing is steady, but it is heavy and shaky. All the while, you can only think about how there’s nothing more that you want to do than spend more time wi


Society of Bioethics and Medicine
- Mar 28
- 4 min
On the Ethics of Neural Twins
Written by Nishanth Araveti Edited by Jacquelyn Tang First proposed by philosopher Derek Parfit, the Teletransporter Thought Experiment supposes the existence of a machine that, upon entering, would clone you perfectly; all memories, neurons, every atom of you perfectly replicated and subsequently replicated on Mars before incinerating the body that stepped in on Earth. Are you on Mars? Or is it a different you that stepped out on Mars? At the root of this problem is the conc


Society of Bioethics and Medicine
- Mar 21
- 4 min
Brainwashing as a Political Weapon: The Legacy of MK Ultra
Written by Elizabeth Katanov Edited by Aisha Abid Imagine being induced in a coma for 23 days, electroshocked three times a day, and then brainwashed for 15 hours every subsequent day for months. This was the case with Project MK-ULTRA, a secret CIA endeavor executed in Montreal’s Allan Memorial Institute throughout the 1950s and 1960s. The fierce rivalry between the Soviet Union and America during the Cold War Era had both sides racing to devise the most efficient weapons. A


Society of Bioethics and Medicine
- Mar 14
- 2 min
Subway Chase and Safety
Written by Pooja Suganthan Edited by Kelvin Wu Two weeks ago, I was chased around the Jamaica 179 Street subway station by a man with a giant bucket filled with grain. Saying it out loud sounds comical now, but at that moment, I was fearing for my life. Days after my train chase, I started to hear more and more stories about violence and harassment on the subways. Pushing riders in front of trains, rape, assault, robbery, stabbing, and murder. My heart ached for all the victi


Society of Bioethics and Medicine
- Mar 7
- 3 min
The Right to Die
Written by Marium Ghobriel Edited by Ishraq Nihal Euthanasia, also known as assisted suicide, is the act of ending the life of someone who suffers from an incurable and painful condition. According to Britannica, the definition of euthanasia is the “act or practice of painlessly putting to death persons suffering from painful and incurable disease or incapacitating physical disorder or allowing them to die by withholding treatment or withdrawing artificial life-support measur


Society of Bioethics and Medicine
- Mar 2
- 3 min
The Uphill Battle of Becoming a Doctor: Social Solitude
Written by Sanjana Ahmed Edited by Lok-Yee Lam As a pre-medical student, I know that most people can recognize that becoming a doctor is no easy feat. Not only do we have to maintain stellar grades and foster group relationships with mentors and professors for the sake of recommendation letters, but we also fill up the rest of our time by pursuing intense extracurriculars in hopes of fulfilling requirements and standing out amongst our peers. It is no wonder that many of us e