University of Maryland A. James Clark School of Engineering

Search
About Us
Visit Us
Giving
Engineering's Future
Academics
Research
News and Events

Prospective Students
Current Students
K-12 Students
Alumni
Faculty and Staff
Business and Government
Media
Newsroom

    Bookmark and Share
Fischell Undergrads Dominate Bioethics Contest

For the second year in a row, Fischell Department of Bioengineering undergraduates, including three freshmen, beat out a national field of 184 other entrants to earn four of the five top spots in the Institute of Biological Engineering's (IBE) annual bioethics essay contest. Sophomore Zachary Russ won for a second year in a row, while freshman Victoria Stephanelli placed second and freshmen Chris Dupuis and Laith Abu-Taleb were first and second runners-up, respectively. As finalists, they presented their papers at IBE's annual conference in March, where the winners were decided.

The first place essay, by Russ, "Mapping the Moral Boundaries of Biological Engineering," argues that given a history of high-profile incidents in which scientific advancement or discoveries inadvertently led to disaster due to failures in safety protocols, the discipline of biological engineering must have its own specific code of ethics, not one borrowed from a parent field. This is because, he feels, biological engineering is a synthesis of disciplines that utilizes a wide variety of scientific techniques, presenting an array of potential dangers and moral issues. The essay presents suggestions as to what form such a new code of ethics could take.

Stefanelli's second place essay, "Bioethics: An Issue of the Future," takes an opposite stance, arguing that too many people's impressions of the possible negative outcomes of biological engineering draw too heavily from the realm of science fiction, and that many fears are "unreasonable or unwarranted." Stefanelli feels that a specific code of ethics would result in too many limitations, restrictions that are too broad, and too much bureaucracy, all of which would slow progress and possibly constitute a "violation of civil liberties by eliminating the [patient's] right to choose" new treatments for injury and disease.

"Scientific Freedom Begins With Regulation," by Depuis, suggests a balance between sensible regulation and morality that would allow science to progress at a meaningful pace while not overstepping ethical concerns. Dupuis stresses humane animal research, respect for all people regardless of culture, and the right for everyone to know both the potential benefits and dangers of research. The paper advocates decoupling the objective work of scientists from subjective moral issues so we can first fully explore, and then make informed decisions about whether and how to use controversial means of problem solving such as stem cell research.

Abu-Taleb's essay, "Does the Field of Biological Engineering Need its Own Code of Ethics?" proposes the kind discussion which must occur in order to determine the answer to that question. Moral issues that should be raised include the possibility of exploitation; the moral rights of stakeholders, regulators, researchers, and the public; and the tradeoff between social benefits and social costs. Abu-Taleb writes that we must analyze four specific issues: human culture, standards for rapid advancement, the need to save lives, and financial costs and allocations.

Related Stories:

"Richbourg, Russ Winners in Bioethics Essay Contest" »

"BioE Freshmen Are Finalists in Bioethics Contest" »

"2 More BioE Students Join Ethics Essay Contest Finalists" »

Learn More:

Visit the Institute of Biological Engineering web site »
April 6, 2009


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Milchberg Receives Grant from Lockheed Martin

Alum's Gift Honors Inspirational Professor

Fisher Bioreactor Wins Professor Venture Fair

Northrop Grumman Funds Doctoral Fellowships

Can Entrepreneurs Survive in This Economy?

How Your Cell Phone Keeps Its Cool

Maryland Daily Record Honors Baras, Dowling

Optical Society Names Smolyaninov a Fellow

Russ Tapped for Genetics Journal Guest Column

Sezmi Launches Customer Pilot in Los Angeles

   
 

News Resources

Newsroom

Search Clark School News

Research Newsroom

Archived News

Press Releases

Magazines and Publications

Press Coverage

   
  Back to top  
     
Visit the University of Maryland Homepage Return to the Clark School Homepage