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Program at a glance per day Wednesday, May 18 16:00 – 20:00 Registration desk open 16:00 – 20:00 Poster mounting Poster area 17:30 – 18:30 Public Lecture Aula 18:30 – 20:00 Welcome reception & Ethics market Foyer
Thursday, May 19 08:00 – 17:30 Registration desk open 08:00 – 09:00 Coffee, tea & postermounting Poster area 09:00 – 09:30 Formal Opening Aula 09:30 – 11:00 Plenary panel sessions on state of the art of ethic s Aula K-001-002 11:00 – 11:30 Coffee & tea break Poster area 11:30 – 13:00 Parallel Session I
Informed Consent, nurses and strikes & withdraw lif e support Aula OP-001-003 Training and education of clinical ethics professio nals I 01A05 OP-004-005 Being a patient, management of moral deliberation & training curriculum 02A06
OP-007-009
Goals and justifications of clinical ethics service s (CES) I 04A04 OP-010-012 The relationship between CES and quality of care & moral competence & policy I 04A05
OP-013-015
The Importance of Addressing Religious and Cultural Issues in End-of-Life Clinical Decisions 08A00
PS-1
Clinical Ethics across Continents and Cultures: A C ase Discussion about Bad Blood 12A05
PS-2
Mediation Tools To Manage Identity Conflict in Clin ical Ethics Consultation BV-0H53
WS-1
13:00 – 14:00 Lunch & poster viewing Poster area 14:00 – 15:30 Parallel Session II
Empirical research on the quality, evaluation, proc esses and products of CES I Auditorium
OP-019-021
Training and education of clinical ethics professio nals II 01A05 OP-022-024 Formats and structures of clinical ethics services (CES) I 02A06 OP-025-027 Goals and justifications of clinical ethics service s (CES) II 04A04 OP-028-030 The relation between CES and quality of care & mora l competence & policy II 04A05
OP-031-033
Others and the relation between CES and quality 05A06 PP-01-09 Evaluation of Training of Health Care Professionals into Facilitators of Moral Deliberation 08A00
PS-3
Thinking like a psychologist: Useful tools from cli nical psychology for the ethics consultant BV-0H53
WS-2
15:30 – 16:00 Coffee & tea break Poster area 16:00 – 17:30 Parallel Session III
Moral theory and moral expertise in CES and the use of conversation methods Auditorium
OP-034-036
Training and education of clinical ethics professio nals III 01A05 OP-037-039 Formats and structures of clinical ethics services (CES) II 02A06 OP-040-042 Goals and justifications of clinical ethics service s (CES) III 04A04 OP-043-045 Single Case Discussions I 04A05 OP-046-048 Empirical research on the quality, evaluation, proc esses and products of CES II 05A06
OP-049-051
Moving Beyond the Case: Strategies for Responding t o Moral Distress 08A00
PS-4
The seven stage model of moral case deliberation: t raining healthcare professionals as moral case deliberation facilitators BV-0H53
WS-3
Program
Wednesday, May 18 16:00 – 20:00 Registration Registration desk open desk
16:00 – 20:00 Poster area Poster mounting
17:30 – 18:30 Aula Public Lecture Chair: Guy Widdershoven Responsibility and Authority: Multiple Perspect ives on Clinical Ethics Prof.dr. Joan Tronto (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, United
States of America)
18:30 – 20:00 Foyer Welcome reception & Ethics market
Thursday, May 19 08:00 – 17:30 Registration Registration desk open desk
08:00 – 09:00 Poster area Coffee, tea & poster mounting
09:00 – 09:30 Aula Formal Opening Chair: Guy Widdershoven Formal Opening
Prof.dr. Guy Widdershoven (VU university medical center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Introduction to history of ICCEC Prof.dr. George Agich (Bowling Green State University, Ohio, United
States of America) Opening music organ player: Playing Bach on a congr ess of
Ethici? Jean van Cleef, The Netherlands
09:30 – 11:00 Aula Plenary panel sessions on state of the art of ethics Chair: Guy Widdershoven K-001 Towards a naturalized clinical ethics
Prof.dr. Marian Verkerk (University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands)
K-002 Committees, cases, and challenges in the UK Dr. Anne Slowther (Warwick Medical School, Coventry, United
Kingdom)
11:00 – 11:30 Poster area Coffee & tea break
PARALLEL SESSION I 11:30 – 13:00 Auditorium Informed Consent, nurses and strikes & withdraw life support
Chair:
OP-001 Medicine, the Media and Moving Standards of Informe d Consent in Organ Donation and Transplantation
Eleanor Milligan (Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia) OP-002 Caring for Patients during Strikes: a Survey of Nur ses’ Dilemmas Ikeoluwa Okerin (Obafemi Awolowo Teaching Hospital, Ife, Nigeria) OP-003 To Apply Moderate Zero Line View to Clinical Ethics Services in
Intensive Care Yen-Yuan Chen (National Taiwan University College of Medicine,
Taipei, Taiwan)
11:30 – 13:00 01A05 Training and education of cli nical ethics professionals I
Chair:
OP-004 A bridge over troubled waters: Linking emotions, co gnitions and ethical responses in everyday clinical practice
Paquita de Zuluete (Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom)
OP-005 ‘Imagine you are a financially poor student…’ makin g Ethics
relevant to your audience when strict time constrai nts exist Ruth Todd (Staffordshire University, Stafford, United Kingdom)
11:30 – 13:00 02A06 Being a patient, management o f moral deliberation & training
curriculum Chair:
OP-007 Moving and Re-moving Ethics. Being a Patient in the Internet-World
Elena Teodora Manea (University of Medicine and Pharmacy Gr. T. Popa Iasi, Exeter, United Kingdom)
OP-008 How (not) to manage moral case deliberation in a he alth care
institution? Frans Kamsteeg (GGNet, Warnsveld, The Netherlands) OP-009 Building Ethics Consultation and Consultation Train ing into an
Innovative Medical School Curriculum Marin Gillis (Herbert Wertheim School of Medicine, Miami, United
States of America)
11:30 – 13:00 04A04 Goals and justifications of c linical ethics services (CES) I Chair:
OP-010 Ethos of Russian Medicine and Perspectives of Clini cal Ethics and Consultation
Elena Grebenshchikova (Kursk State Medical University, Kursk, Russia)
OP-011 Commitment in clinical ethics consultations: a bene fit or a risk? Nicolas Foureur (Cochin Hospital, Paris, France) OP-012 ?????
Hilbert Fleddérus (Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport, The Hague, The Netherlands)
11:30 – 13:00 04A05 The relationship between CES and quality of care & moral
competence & policy I Chair:
OP-013 Mapping the gaps in capacity decision support: movi ng toward clarity in the muddle
Christopher Benitez (University of California, San Francisco, United States of America)
OP-014 Teaching Ethical Competency to Medical Students – W hen to Call
for a Consult Katharine Meacham (Mars Hill College, Mars Hill, United States of
America) OP-015 A Role for Ethics Consultation in Enhancing Conscie ntious
Practice in Health Care Erin O’Donnell (Mayo Clinic, Rochester, United States of America)
11:30 – 13:00 08A00 The Importance of Addressing Religious and Cultural Issues in End-of-Life Clinical Decisions Chair: James Walter PS-1.1 The Importance of Addressing Religious Traditions i n End-of-Life Clinical Decisions James Walter (Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, United States of America) PS-1.2 The Importance of Addressing Religious Issues in En d-of-Life Clinical Decisions Robert J. Walter (Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington DC, United States of America) PS-1.3 The Importance of Addressing Cultural Issues in End -of-Life Clinical Decisions Jennifer K. Walter (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, United States of America)
11:30 – 13:00 12A05 Clinical Ethics across Contin ents and Cultures: A Case Discussion about Bad Blood
Chair: Nicholas Kockler
PS-2.1 Clinical Ethics across Continents and Cultures: A C ase Discussion about Bad Blood
Nicholas Kockler (Providence Health and Services, Portland, United States of America)
PS-2.2 Clinical Ethics across Continents and Cultures: A C ase
Discussion about Bad Blood Vina Vaswani (Yenepoya University, Mangalore, India) PS-2.3 Clinical Ethics across Continents and Cultures: A C ase
Discussion about Bad Blood Anita Ho (University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada) PS-2.4 Clinical Ethics across Continents and Cultures: A C ase
Discussion about Bad Blood …Ilkilic (History, Philosophy and Ethics of Medicine, Mainz, Germany)
11:30 – 13:00 BV-0H53 Mediation Tools To Manage Identity Conflict in Cli nical Ethics Consultation
Chair: Lauren Edelstein
WS-1 Mediation Tools To Manage Identify Conflict in Clin ical Ethics Consultation
Lauren Edelstein (Johns Hopkins Howard Country General Hospital, Columbia, United States of America)
13:00 – 14:00 Poster area Lunch & poster viewing
PARALLEL SESSION II 14:00 – 15:30 Auditorium Empirical research on th e quality, evaluation, processes and
products of CES I Chair:
OP-019 Ethical challenges and how to develop ethics suppor t in
community health care Lillian Lillemoen (University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway) OP-020 A method for detecting ethically challenging situat ions in end-of-
life decision making Eva Winkler (University Hospital of the Ludwig Maximilian University
Munich, Munich, Germany) OP-021 The Implicit morality of child abuse detection at E R’s Jos Kole (Ethics Institute – University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The
Netherlands)
14:00 – 15:30 01A05 Training and education of cl inical ethics professionals II Chair:
OP-022 Impact of training on the implementation of ethics consultation services: lessons learnt from a German educational programme
Andrea Dörries (Center for Health Ethics, Hannover, Germany) OP-023 From Baseline to Online: Orientation for clinical e thics consult
service team members Joan Henriksen Hellyer (Mayo Clinic, Rochester, United States of
America) OP-024 The Value of Logic for Clinical Ethics Constance Perry (Drexel University, Elkins Park, United States of
America)
14:00 – 15:30 02A06 Formats and structures of cl inical ethics services (CES) I Chair: OP-025 Paediatric Clinical Ethics Service delivery in Aust ralia Catherine Lees (The Royal Children’s Hospital, Parkville, Australia) OP-026 Doctering With Borders: Ethics of Care in the Inten sive Care Unit (ICU) Mieke Visser (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) OP-027 Making it Work: Teamwork in Ethics Consultation
Andrea Frolic (Hamilton Health Sciences and McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada)
14:00 – 15:30 04A04 Goals and justifications of clinical ethics services (CES) II Chair: Marian Verkerk
OP-028 Models of ethics support in institutional elderly c are, a literature review Sandra van der Dam (University of Maastricht, Maastricht, The Netherlands)
OP-029 Moving on after a medical error. Should HECs and cl inical ethicists get involved in disclosure?
Linda Scheirton (Creighton University, Omaha, United States of America)
OP-030 Reflections on two studies of staff’s ethical diari es in adult and in
child and adolescent psychiatric inpatient care Veikko Pelto-Piri (Psychiatric research center, Orebro, Sweden)
14:00 – 15:30 04A05 The relation between CES and quality of care & moral
competence & policy II Chair: John F. Tuohey
OP-031 The mentally disabled person has a will – but often no voice Klaus Kobert (Evangelisches Krankenhaus Bielefeld, Bielefeld, Germany)
OP-033 Clinical ethics consultations family ‘moral order’ and the justification of French laws concerning access to r eproductive technologies
Denis Berthiau (University Paris Descartes, Malakoff, France)
14:00 – 15:30 05A06 Others and the relation betw een CES and quality Chair:
PP-01 A Discussion on End of Life Treatment Decision Maki ng Juan Pablo Beca (Universidad del Desarrollo, Santiago, Chile)
PP-02 Can children decide to participate in research?
Irma Hein (De Bascule, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
PP-03 Ethical issues involved in patients requesting and clinicians making diagnoses
Ananta Dave (Dudley and Walsall Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust, Sutton Coldfield, United Kingdom)
PP-04 Evaluation of ethical aspect in clinical practice g uidelines Radim Licenik (Palacky University Faculty of Medicine, Olomouc,
Czech Republic) PP-05 Truth-telling in cancer patients in a global societ y Cristine Gavrilovici (University of Medicine and Pharmacy Gr. T. Popa,
Iasi, Romania) PP-07 Realization of autonomy principle in clinical pract ice in Ukraine Liudmila Paliei (National Medical Academy for Post-Graduate
Education named after P.L. Shupyk, Kyiv, Ukraine) PP-08 The Ethical Debates of Inter-professional Conflicts : a Case Study
in Nigeria Samuel Aliyu (Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Osogbo,
Nigeria) PP-09 Ethical warrants of guidelines for diagnosis and tr eatment of
children and adolescents with ADHD Wilma Göttgens-Jansen (Radboud University Nijmegen Medical
Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands)
14:00 – 15:30 08A00 Evaluation of Training of Hea lth Care Professionals into
Facilitators of Moral Deliberation Chair: Bert Molewijk
PS-3.1 Philosophical background of a training for facilita tors of moral deliberation
Bert Molewijk (VU university medical center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
PS-3.2 Aims and didactics of training facilitators moral d eliberation Menno de Bree (University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen,
The Netherlands)
PS-3.3 Empirical evaluation of the training. Skills, compe tencies & institutional experience
Bert Molewijk (VU university medical center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
14:00 – 15:30 BV-0H53 Thinking like a psychologis t: Useful tools from clinical
psychology for the ethics consultant Chair:
WS-2 Thinking like a psychologist: Useful tools from cli nical psychology for the ethics consultant
Cynthia Griggins (University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Cleveland, United States of America)
15:30 – 16:00 Poster area Coffee & tea break
PARALLEL SESSION III 16:00 – 17:30 Auditorium Moral theory and moral e xpertise in CES and the use of
conversation methods Chair:
OP-034 On the Role of the Clinical Ethicist Zuzana Deans (University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom)
OP-035 A psychological model to analyze and solve moral co nflicts in ethics consultation Gerald Neitzke (Hannover Medical University, Hannover, Germany)
OP-036 Ethic and irony Guido Giacomo Gattai (University of Florence, Florence, Italy)
16:00 – 17:30 01A05 Training and education of cl inical ethics professionals III Chair:
OP-037 How many history direct current ethical decision-ma king in clinical psychiatry: implications for ethics traini ng and daily practice
Rael Strous (Beer Yaakov Mental Health Center, Beer Yaakov, Israël) OP-038 From pseudo philosopher towards ethically competent
professional? Questioning the necessity of ethical theory in professional ethics education
Mariëtte van den Hoven (University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands)
OP-039 Nurses’ Competencies for Participation in Ethics Co mmittees Bart Cusveller (Christian University of Applied Sciences, Ede, The
Netherlands)
16:00 – 17:30 02A06 Formats and structures of cl inical ethics services (CES) II Chair:
OP-040 Moving CEC to New Frontiers: A Collaboration betwee n a Social Entrepreneur and Clinical Ethics Consultant
Kate Ettinger (Center for Health Professions, San Francisco, United States of America)
OP-041 Moving from the Bedside into the Community: Experie nce of a
clinical ethicist in a community Advance Care Plann ing Workshop
Kate Ettinger (Center for Health Professions, San Francisco, United States of America)
OP-042 Moving from Elder Mediation to Elder Ethics: Design ing a
Different Hat for CEC in the Community Setting Kate Ettinger (Center for Health Professions, San Francisco, United
States of America)
16:00 – 17:30 04A04 Goals and justifications of clinical ethics services (CES) III Chair:
OP-043 The clinical ethics consultation (CEC): clarificati on tool for physicians and patients to avoid complaints?
Dario Sacchini (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore – Institute of Bioethics, Rome, Italy)
OP-044 Where Should We Go from Here? Transformation of Eth ics
Services in a Culture of Excellence Nicholas Kockler (Providence Health and Services, Portland, United
States of America) OP-045 Clinical ethics consultation and the concept of own ership Louise Campbell (Trinity College Dublin, Limerick, Ireland)
16:00 – 17:30 04A05 Single Case Discussions I Chair:
OP-046 Liver transplantation criteria, their interpretatio n and application: Challenges raised by the case of JT
Katherine Duthie (Royal Alexandra Hospital, Edmonton, Canada) OP-047 An ethical process about information in an Alzheime r disease
clinical case in a familial context Pierre Boitte (Centre d’éthique médicale, Lille, France) OP-048 Phoenix Arizona Case: Imminent Threat of Death in P regnancy Gerard Magill (Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, United States of
America)
16:00 – 17:30 05A06 Empirical research on the qua lity, evaluation, processes and products of CES II
Chair:
OP-049 Moral deliberation in psychiatry. Needs and expecta tions of employees in a Dutch psychiatric organisation regar ding moral deliberation
Maarten van Woelderen (Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center, Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
OP-050 The Use of Practical and Innovative Tools to Impr ove the Quality
of Ethics Consultation Ellen Fox (VA National Center for Ethics in Health Care, Washington
DC, United States of America) OP-051 Clinical Ethics Committees and the Language of Care Helen Kohlen (Philosophic Theological University of Vallendar,
Vallendar, Germany)
16:00 – 17:30 08A00 Moving Beyond the Case: Strat egies for Responding to Moral
Distress Chair: Lucia Wocial
PS-4.1 Moving Beyond the Case: Strategies for Responding t o Moral Distress
Lucia Wocial (Clarian Health, Indianapolis, United States of America)
16:00 – 17:30 BV-0H53 The seven stage model of mo ral case deliberation: training
healthcare professionals as moral case deliberation facilitators Chair: Menno de Bree
WS-3 The seven stage model of moral case deliberation: t raining healthcare professionals as moral case deliberation facilitators Menno de Bree (University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands)
Friday, May 20 08:00 – 17:30 Registration desk open 08:00 – 09:00 Coffee & tea Poster area 09:00 – 11:00 Plenary panel session Aula K-003-004 11:00 – 11:30 Coffee & tea break Poster area 11:30 – 13:00 Parallel Session IV
Goals and justifications of clinical ethics service s (CES) IV Auditorium
OP-052-054
Training and education of clinical ethics professio nals IV 01A05 OP-055-056 The involvement of clients and family members in CE S I 02A06 OP-058-060 Empirical research and the involvement of clients a nd family members in CES 04A04
OP-061-063
The relation between CES and quality of care & mora l competence & policy III 04A05
OP-064-066
The involvement of clients and empirical research a nd goals and justifications and training of clinical ethics prof essionals 05A06
PP-10-18
Clinical Ethics Support – success or failure? An or ganizational perspective 10A00
PS-5
Evaluation of Clinical ethics Consultation (CES)/Mo ral Deliberation (MD) 06A04
PS-6
Emotions in moral case deliberation. Is there a rig ht way of dealing with emotions? BV-0H19
WS-4
13:00 – 14:00 Lunch & poster viewing Poster area 14:00 – 15:30 Parallel Session V
Training and education of c linical ethics professi onals and the image of clinical ethics Auditorium
OP-067-069
Training and education of clinical ethics professio nals V 01A05 OP-070-071 Formats and structures of clinical ethics services (CES) III 02A06 OP-073-075 Public Health & Advanced Directives 04A04 OP-076-078 Single Case Discussions II 04A05 OP-079-081 Moral theory and moral expertise in CES I 05A06 OP-082-083 Moral Responsibilities and Mental Health 10A00 PS-7
Moralmap.com: website for moral reflection BV-0H19 WS-5 15:30 – 16:00 Coffee & tea break Poster area 16:00 – 17:30 Parallel Session VI
Training and education of clinical ethics professio nals VI Auditorium OP-085-087 The involvement of clients and family members in CE S II 01A05 OP-088-090 Formats and structures of clinical ethics services (CES) IV 02A06 OP-091-093 Moral theory and moral expertise in CES II 04A04 OP-094-096 The relation between CES and quality of care & mora l competence & policy IV 04A05
OP-097-099
Empirical research and moral theory 05A06 PP-19-27 Competing Roles of a Clinical Ethics Consultant: Ad vocacy and Value-Neutral Mediation 10A00
PS-8
Moving Ethics: an experiential workshop connecting body and mind in ethics consultation practice BV-0H19
WS-6
18:00 – 22:30 Conference Dinner Rosarium
Friday, May 20 08:00 – 17:30 Registration Registration desk open desk
08:00 – 09:00 Poster area Coffee & tea
09:00 – 11:00 Aula Plenary panel session Chair: Bert Molewijk K-003 Certification of the field: ASBH Taskforce Prof.dr. Mark Aulisio (Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland,
United States of America) K-004 Clinical ethics in developing countries Prof.dr. Henk ten Have (Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, United States of America)
11:00 – 11:30 Poster area Coffee & tea break
PARALLEL SESSION IV 11:30 – 13:00 Auditorium Goals and justifications o f clinical ethics services (CES) IV Chair:
OP-052 Ethicist stat! Towards providing timely ethics cons ults to the Emergency Department
Jacky Parker (The Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, Canada) OP-053 Evaluating Ethics Consultation Thomas May (Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, United
States of America) OP-054 Relevance of the Normative Function of a Clinical E thics
Committee. Elaboration of a guideline for blood tra nsfusions in Jehovah’s Witness patients
María Inés Gómez (Universidad del Desarrollo, Santiago, Chile)
11:30 – 13:00 01A05 Training and education of cl inical ethics professionals IV Chair:
OP-055 Combined use of the ‘Four Topics’ and ‘Clinical Cas uistry’ methods in clinical ethics case consultation: a new approach
Robert Walker (USF College of Medicine, Florida, United States of America)
OP-056 Health Professional’s knowledge and perception abou t Informed
Consent in a Cuban Hospital Dirce Guilhem (University of Brasilia College of Health Sciences,
Brasilia, Brazil)
11:30 – 13:00 02A06 The involvement of clients a nd family members in CES I Chair:
OP-058 The Dilemma of the Right to Die in Cameroon Martin Anu Nkematabong (University of Yaounde, Yaounde, Cameroon)
OP-059 Violation of ethical principles: confusion about wh at is/is not euthanasia and fear of litigation means patients ar e dying in extreme pain and suffering Colleen Cartwright (Southern Cross University, Tweed Heads, Australia)
OP-060 Patient/Relative Participation in Ethical Consultat ions: a Nigerian Experience Michael Afolabi (Lautech, Osogbro, Nigeria)
11:30 – 13:00 04A04 Empirical research and the in volvement of clients and family
members in CES Chair:
OP-061 Moving by experience; aims and results in moral cas e deliberation
Frouk Weidema (VU university medical center/GGNet, Warnsveld, the Netherlands)
OP-062 Aiming at equality; Experiences with client partici pation in moral
case deliberation Leonard van Wijk (VU university medical center/GGNet, Warnsveld,
the Netherlands) OP-063 Physicians’ awareness and opinions about clinical e thics
consultation: Data from Turkey Murat Civaner (Uludag University School of Medicine, Bursa, Turkey)
11:30 – 13:00 04A05 The relation between CES and quality of care & moral
competence & policy III Chair:
OP-064 Clinical Ethics Consultation Moving through Concent ric Circles: the perspective of organizational ethics
Renzo Pegoraro (Fondazione Lanza, Padova, Italy) OP-065 Utilizing Clinical Ethics Consult Deliberations to Inform Leaders
and Policy Makers in Integrated Health Systems Eric Wasylenko (Alberta Health Services, Okotoks, Canada) OP-066 Developing Practice Standards for Healthcare Ethics : The
Canadian Approach Cheryl Cline (Queens University and Kingston General Hospital,
Kingston, Canada)
11:30 – 13:00 05A06 The involvement of clients an d empirical research and goals and justifications and training of clinical ethics prof essionals
Chair:
PP-10 Realization of principles and rules of bioethics in the medical legislation of Russia
Irina Aseeva (South-West State University, Kursk, Russia) PP-11 Access to Health Care: Perceptions of People Living with
HIV/AIDS Ravi Vaswani (Yenepoya University, Mangalore, India) PP-12 Ethics consultation: who is the target? Juan Pablo Beca (Universidad del Desarrollo, Santiago, Chile) PP-13 Place of Ethics in SE Health Professions Education and Practice Eisa Johali (King Saud University Health Sciences, Riyadh, Saudi
Arabia) PP-14 ‘I have learnt to exercise silence’. Senior medical students and
their ethics reports: some challenges for medical e ducators Phillipa Malpas (University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand) PP-15 An evaluation of bioethics learning to undergraduat e medical
students Lorna Luco (Universidad del Desarrollo, Santiago, Chile) PP-16 The case-construction method in courses for clinica l ethics Kenji Hattori (Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine,
Gunma, Japan) PP-17 New Approach for Teaching Bioethics to Nursing stud ents Dorit Rubinstein (Zefat Academic College, Yehud, Israël) PP-18 What is a role of the instructor in medical ethics case study? Akiko Miyagi (Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine,
Gunma, Japan)
11:30 – 13:00 10A00 Clinical Ethics Support – suc cess or failure? An organizational perspective
Chair: Ana Borovecki
PS-5.1 The impact of the organisation on clinical ethics s ervices Andrea Dörries (Center for Health Ethics, Hannover, Germany) PS-5.2 CEC- well-meant, but dysfunctional activities in th e realm of
medical ethics In the countries in transition Ana Borovecki (University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia) PS-5.3 ‘Taking Ethics Out of Isolation: A Systems Approach to
Organizational Quality Improvement’ Evan DeRenzo (Washington Hospital Center, Rockville Maryland,
United States of America) PS-5.4 Case study: a thematic discussion group on respect for elderly
people in a French hospital Pierre Boitte (Centre d’éthique médicale, Lille, France)
11:30 – 13:00 06A04 Evaluation of Clinical ethics Consultation (CEC)/Moral Deliberation (MD)
Chair: Jan Schildmann
PS-6.1 Evaluation of Clinical Ethics Consultation (CEC)/Mo ral Deliberation (MD)
Jan Schildmann (Ruhr-University Bochum, Bochum, Germany) PS-6.2 Normativity in the evaluation of clinical ethics co nsultation (CEC)
& moral deliberation (MD): a critical review and pl ea for a theory and context sensitive approach
Jan Schildmann (Ruhr-University Bochum, Bochum, Germany) PS-6.3 Evaluation and normativity of CEC/MD Gerald Neitzke (Hannover Medical University, Hannover, Germany)
PS-6.4 Is the discussion of patient cases in clinical ethi cs- committees useful for the clinician s? Reidun Førde (University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway) PS-6.5 Evaluation of moral case deliberation through respo nsive evaluation. Dialogue on dialogue Bert Molewijk (VU university medical center/GGNet, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
11:30 – 13:00 BV-0H19 Emotions in moral case deli beration. Is there a right way of dealing with emotions?
Chair: Dick Kleinlugtenbelt
WS-4 Emotions in moral case deliberation Dick Kleinlugtenbelt (GGNet, Warnsveld, the Netherlands)
13:00 – 14:00 Poster area Lunch & poster viewing
PARALLEL SESSION V 14:00 – 15:30 Auditorium Training and education o f clinical ethics professionals and the
image of clinical ethics Chair:
OP-067 Advance Care Planning: benefits and challenges of
implementation at a health care facility Elizabeth Clark (JJ Peters VA Medical Center, Bronx, United States of
America) OP-068 Training Ethics Committee Members as a Necessary St ep Naama Wietchner (International Center for Health Law and Ethics, Zur
Yigal, Israël) OP-069 Who’s Afraid of Ethics Consultations? Kurt Schmidt (Center for Medical Ethics, Frankfurt, Germany)
14:00 – 15:30 01A05 Training and education of cl inical ethics professionals V Chair:
OP-070 A Comparison of Methods of Training Robert Orr (Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, United States of America)
OP-071 Informational Deficits in Clinical Ethics Consultat ion: When clinicians (unintentionally) manipulate facts to ac hieve a preferred outcome Daryl Pullman (Memorial University, St. John’s Newfoundland & Labrador, Canada)
14:00 – 15:30 02A06 Formats and structures of cl inical ethics services (CES) III Chair:
OP-073 Moving Clinical Ethics Consultation Services into t he Future: Becoming Proactive; a Necessary Paradigm Shift
Thomas Foreman (The Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, Canada) OP-074 Moving Ethics into the Community Mary Caldwell (Mission Hospital, Asheville, United States of America) OP-075 Good policymaking in clinical ethics: from a sense of urgency to
institutional change in the case of artificial nutr ition and hydration
Jürgen Wallner (Hospital of St. John of God, Vienna, Austria)
14:00 – 15:30 04A04 Public Health & Advanced Dir ectives Chair:
OP-076 Clinical Ethics Consultation as a Model for Public Health Ethics Consultation
Jaro Kotalik (Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, Canada) OP-077 Missing the Mark? Advance Health Directive’s (AHD) in a Tertiary
Referral Hospital in Australia Eleanor Milligan (Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia) OP-078 Ethics of Embryo Research: A Muslim Perspectives Ahmed Ragab (Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt)
14:00 – 15:30 04A05 Single Case Discussions II Chair:
OP-079 Are We Doing the Right Thing? Dealing with Moral Di stress in the Clinical Setting
Kurt Smidt-Jernstrom (Kaiser Sunnyside Medical Center, Clackamas, United States of America)
OP-080 The Ethical Challenge of Smoking in Hospitals: A Mo ving Tale Eleanor Milligan (Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia)
OP-081 Ethics Consultation and the Possibility of Psychiat ric Terminal Illness?
Mark Aulisio (Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, United States of America)
14:00 – 15:30 05A06 Moral theory and moral exper tise in CES I Chair:
OP-082 To Account for or To Disregard Social Vulnerability when Allocating Resources
K.G. Gervais (Minnesota Center for Health Care Ethics, St. Paul, United States of America)
OP-083 Moral Courage: Necessary Skill for Moral Expertise Vicki Lachman (Drexel University, Philadelphia, United States of
America)
14:00 – 15:30 10A00 Moral Responsibilities and M ental Health Chair: Elleke Landeweer
PS-7.1 Explaining why mental disorders can influence moral responsibility
Gerben Meynen (GGZ Ingeest, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) PS-7.2 Seclusion and responsibility: dilemmas and limitati ons in
reducing seclusion Cecile Gijsbers van Wijk (GGZ Ingeest, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) PS-7.3 Moral Responsibilities and Mental Health Elleke Landeweer (VU university medical center, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands) PS-7.4 Moving health care professionals in moral case deli beration: a
dialogue about responsibility Margreet Stolper (VU university medical center, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands)
14:00 – 15:30 BV-0H19 Moralmap.com: website for m oral reflection Chair: Myra van Zwieten
WS-5 Moralmap.com: website for moral reflection Myra van Zwieten (Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
15:30 – 16:00 Poster area Coffee & tea break
PARALLEL SESSION VI 16:00 – 17:30 Auditorium Training and education of clinical ethics professionals VI Chair:
OP-085 Accrediting Training Programs and Developing a Code of Ethics for Clinical Ethics Consultants: Recent ASBH Initia tives
Robert Baker (Union Graduate College, Schenectady, United States of America)
OP-086 Revisiting Non-physician Consultations: the Need fo r Ethical
Education Michael Afolabi (Lautech, Osogbo, Nigeria) OP-087 Bioethics and Nursing: Theory and Clinical Practice Dirce Guilhem (University of Brasilia College of Health Sciences,
Brasilia, Brazil)
16:00 – 17:30 01A05 The involvement of clients and family members in CES II Chair:
OP-088 Involvement of parents in Clinical Ethics Committee s in end-of-life decisions regarding children
Marianne Bahus (Section for Medical Ethics, Oslo, Norway) OP-089 An impartial perspective – the interaction between family
members and a clinical ethicist Dorothea Touwen (Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The
Netherlands) OP-090 Ethical challenges in Norwegian nursing homes. The experience
of patients and next of kin Elisabeth Gjerberg (Center of Medical Ethics, Oslo, Norway)
16:00 – 17:30 02A06 Formats and structures of cl inical ethics services (CES) IV Chair:
OP-091 Who is the clinical ethicist? – and how does that a ffect the implementation of ethical support services?
Rouven Christian Porz (University Hospital Berne, Berne, Switzerland) OP-092 Moving from the Bedside into the Clinic: Preventati ve Ethics
Education in an Outpatient Clinic Kate Ettinger (Center for Health Professions, San Francisco, United
States of America) OP-093 Setting up a students’ clinical ethics committee Carolyn Johnston (King’s College London School of Medicine,
London, United Kingdom)
16:00 – 17:30 04A04 Moral theory and moral exper tise in CES II Chair:
OP-094 Conscientious objections to end-of-life procedures: a neglected topic in clinical ethics services research
Chris Gastmans (Catholic University Leuven, Leuven, Belgium) OP-095 Different types of expertise in clinical ethics con sultation –
lessons to learn from the debate on empirical medic al ethics Sabine Salloch (Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum, Germany) OP-096 Autothanatography: An Ethical Approach to Dying Annette Allen (University of Louisville, Louisville, United States of
America)
16:00 – 17:30 04A05 The relation between CES and quality of care & moral
competence & policy IV Chair:
OP-097 Moral Distress & The Health Care Professional Thompson Faller (University of Portland, Portland, United States of
America) OP-098 Moving reproductive ethics: From the laboratory and the clinic to
the organization of maternity care Raymond de Vries (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, United States
of America) OP-099 Autonomy, Dignity and Discharge of the Elderly Pati ent Lynn Maitland (Trinity Health, Novi, United States of America)
16:00 – 17:30 05A06 Empirical research and moral theory Chair:
PP-19 Patient’s will and doctors’ competence: Reasoning i n clinical ethics consultation (CEC)
Margarete Pfaefflin (Epilepsy-Center Bethel, Bielefeld, Germany) PP-20 Taking care of elderly patients in intensive care u nits: a gradual
elaboration of a clinical ethics grid as an experim ental co-construction among professionals and researches in ethics
Jean-Philippe Cobbaut (Catholic University of Lille, Lille, France) PP-21 Early Indicators of Ethical Issues: Strengthening N urses’ Voices Katherine Brown-Saltzman (UCLA Healthcare System, Los Angeles,
United States of America) PP-22 Moral Distress Thermometer a New Screening Tool for Moral
Distress Lucia Wocial (Clarian Health, Indianapolis, United States of America) PP-23 The Ethics Tower of Babel: a need for common langua ge in the
documentation and practice of clinical ethics servi ces Mike Kekewich (The Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, Canada)
PP-24 Ethics committees in Belarus: ethics promoters or f ormal structures?
Andrei Famenka (State Service of Forensic Medicine of the Republic of Belarus, Minsk, Belarus)
PP-25 Ethics in practice Pernilla Pergert (Karolinska Unversity Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden) PP-26 Clinical Ethics Support for end-of-life decisions i n intensive care
– Coming of age of an innovative model Barbara Meyer-Zehnder (University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland) PP-27 ‘Thick ethical concepts’ in child abuse detection a t ERs Jos Kole (University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands)
16:00 – 17:30 10A00 Competing Roles of a Clinical Ethics Consultant: Advocacy and
Value-Neutral Mediation Chair: Dien Ho
PS-8.1 Competing Roles of a Clinical Ethics Consultant: Ad vocacy and Value-Neutral Mediation
Dien Ho (Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, Boston, United States of America)
PS-8.2 Value-Neutrality in Clinical Ethics Consultation Dien Ho (Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences,
Boston, United States of America) PS-8.3 Advocacy in Ethics Consultation with Vulnerable Pat ients: Case
Study Involving a Ward of the State Maureen Kelley (University of Washington School of Medicine,
Seattle, United States of America) PS-8.4 Is Advocacy Only for Patients? A Case Study Susan Miller (Methodist Academic Medicine Associates, Houston,
United States of America) PS-8.5 Approaching Advocacy in Clinical Ethics Consultatio n with
Caution Lisa Rasmussen (University of North Carolina, Charlotte, United
States of America)
16:00 – 17:30 BV-0H19 Moving Ethics: an experient ial workshop connecting body and
mind in ethics consultation practice Chair: Andrea Frolic
WS-6 Moving Ethics: an experiential workshop connecting body and mind in ethics consultation practice
Victoria Slager (Victoria Slager Choreography, Ancaster, Canada)
18:00 – 22:30 Rosarium Conference Dinner
Saturday, May 21 08:00 – 13:00 Registration desk open 08:00 – 09:30 Coffee & tea Poster area 09:30 – 11:00 Parallel Session VII
Moral theory and moral expertise in CES III Auditorium OP-100-102 Training and education of clinical ethics professio nals VII 01A05 OP-103-104 Formats and structures of clinical ethics services (CES) V 02A06 OP-106-108 Single Case Discussions III 04A04 OP-109-111 The relation between CES and quality of care & mora l competence & policy V 04A05
OP-112-114
Cheap and Fair and use of restraint 12A05 OP-115-117 Difficulties, ambivalences and experiences in the p ractice of clinical ethics consultation 08A00
PS-9
Training health care professionals as facilitators of moral case deliberation: learning by doing BV-0H19
WS-7
11:00 – 11:30 Coffee & tea break Poster area 11:30 – 12:45 Plenary closing session: debate on ethics in practi ce with Stakeholders Aula 12:45 – 13:00 Closing remarks Aula 13:00 – 14:00 Poster dismantling Poster area
Saturday , May 21 08:00 – 13:00 Registration Registration desk open desk
08:00 – 09:30 Poster area Coffee & tea
PARALLEL SESSION VII 09:30 – 11:00 Auditorium Moral theory and moral e xpertise in CES III Chair:
OP-100 Narrative and hermeneutical approaches to clinical ethics support services Rouven Christian Porz (University Hospital Berne, Berne, Switzerland)
OP-101 Macro ethics and moral deliberation on the ward. De velopment of a normative framework for reproductive centres in t he Netherlands.
Norbert Steinkamp (Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands)
OP-102 Ethics is Moving – As Long as Being Lost Isn’t So B ad Melinda Ann McGarrah Sharp (Phillips Theological Seminary, Tulsa,
United States of America)
09:30 – 11:00 01A05 Training and education of cl inical ethics professionals VII Chair:
OP-103 An Innovative and Interactive Bioethics Consultatio n Curriculum from the Montefiore-Einstein Center for Bioethics
Hannah Lipman (Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, United States of America)
OP-104 Consent in Medical Practice: Gap between Theory and Practice Vina Vaswani (Yenepoya University, Mangalore, India)
09:30 – 11:00 02A06 Formats and structures of cl inical ethics services (CES) V Chair:
OP-106 Building and sustaining a clinical ethics service ( CES): challenges and successes
Marie-Eve Bouthillier (CSSSS de Laval, Laval, Canada) OP-107 Challenges and Accomplishments in Delivery of Clini cal Ethics
Service: Perspective from the North-western Ontario Julija Kelecevic (Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, Canada) OP-108 Medical Ethics Committees in Patients’ Rights Act: Ethics, Law
and Reality Naama Wietchner (International Center for Health Law and Ethics, Zur
Yigal, Israël)
09:30 – 11:00 04A04 Single Case Discussions III Chair:
OP-109 Responsibility and the Urge to Follow-Up: An Exampl e of Moral Complexity in Clinical Ethics Practice
Stuart Finder (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, United States of America)
OP-110 The Utrecht Method – an ethical case deliberation m odel Carla Kessler (Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands) OP-111 Never again: One patient’s experience in completing a
psychiatric advance directive Cynthia Griggins (University Hospitals Case Medical Center,
Cleveland, United States of America)
09:30 – 11:00 04A05 The relation between CES and quality of care & moral
competence & policy V Chair:
OP-112 An Ethics Strategic Plan (saves us from going madly off in all directions)
Rick Singleton (Eastern Health, St. John’s Newfoundland & Labrador, Canada)
OP-113 Preserving Human Dignity during Treatment of Handcu ffed
Prisoners Dorit Rubinstein (Michal Peiser Zefat Academic College, Yehud, Israel)
OP-114 Case Features and Systemic Pressures Impacting Inca pacitated
Patients Alone at a Safety Net Hospital Eric Isaacs (University of California, San Francisco, United States of
America)
09:30 – 11:00 12A05 Cheap and Fair and use of re straint Chair: OP-115 Is it possible to make cheap services fair?
Allerdiena Hubbeling (South-West London and St. George’s NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom)
OP-116 End of Life Issues and the Brazilian Medicine Leo Pessini (Saint Camillus University, Sao Paulo, Brazil) OP-117 Soft restraint or hard alternative? The ethics of t echnological
alternatives to restraints in residential care for people with dementia or intellectual disabilities: a research p roject
Brenda Frederiks (VU university medical center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
09:30 – 11:00 08A00 Difficulties, ambivalences an d experiences in the practice of clinical ethics consultation
Chair: Eva Winkler
PS-9.1 Pitfalls in clinical ethics consultation (CEC): con flicts of duty and interest
Margarete Pfaefflin (Epilepsy-Center Bethel, Bielefeld, Germany) PS-9.2 Success factors and problems in getting an ethics c onsultation
up and running Eva Winkler (University Hospital of the Ludwig Maximilian University
Munich, Munich, Germany) PS-9.3 Living with the result of an ethics consultation – the Ethics
consultant’s influence on outcome and process Stella Reiter-Theil (Medical Faculty, Basel, Switzerland)
09:30 – 11:00 BV-0H19 Training health care professi onals as facilitators of moral case deliberation: learning by doing Chair: Margreeth Stolper
WS-7 Training health care professionals as facilitators of moral case deliberation: learning by doing
Margreet Stolper (VU university medical center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
11:00 – 11:30 Poster area Coffee & tea break
11:30 – 12:45 Aula Plenary closing session: debate on ethics in practice with
Stakeholders Chair: Bert Molewijk
What American ethics consultants are talking about. ..and NOT talking about Cynthia Griggins (University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Cleveland, United States of America) Ideas regarding future needs of clinical ethics sup port Ana Borovečkim (University of Zagreb, School of Medicine “Andrija Štampar” School of Public Health, Zagreb, Croatia) Evaluation of clinical ethics support services: nor mative and empirical challenges Jan Schildmann (Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum, Germany)
Capacity Building in Clinical Ethics Consultation Karim Syahirah (Research Assiociate Center for Biomedical Ethics National University of Singapore, Singapore, Republic of Singapore)
12:45 – 13:00 Aula Closing remarks
13:00 – 14:00 Poster area Poster dismantling