What is This?

This weblog is written by the Editors of The American Journal of Bioethics (AJOB). We are told by research librarians in a position to make such claims and whom we did not pay off that this was the first editors' blog for a medical or biomedical science journal, and that this seems true was confirmed in an article in Nature in December. But now, lots of editors are blogging in that capacity, including editors' blogs at Nature Neuroscience, Nature Genetics and Scientific American.

The blog format allows the editors to tap an incredible stream of information that relates to bioethics as it flows through our offices.

If you like the blog, you may indeed want to try the dry scholarly stuff - The American Journal of Bioethics itself can be found at http://bioethics.net and represents the collective, peer-reviewed efforts of a traditional scholarly journal, one that represents the diversity of methods, views and institutions that characterize the rich field of bioethics.

The Editors are:
Glenn McGee PhD - Editor in Chief, American Journal of Bioethics
David Magnus PhD - Stanford University - Associate Editor,
Paul Root Wolpe PhD - University of Pennsylvania - Associate Editor. and
Summer Johnson PhD - Bioethics Education Network, LLC-- Editor, Bioethics.net.


In addition, Art Caplan and Ricki Lewis are regular guest bloggers these days, and each of their posts are identified by name.

We have spawned several other blogs and most of them keep close touch with us, and Karama at sowhatcanido bought us a cup of coffee in thanks. We link to every one of them, and as many others as we find.


FAQ:

WHY WOULD A MEDICAL JOURNAL'S EDITORS WRITE A BLOG?

Plenty of people wrote us and complained that the Journal's web site 1) did not cover all the news (only a few things fit there), 2) did not discuss the news or put it in context. So, now we think we've solved that problem. Editing a journal makes this a much, much easier proposition: not only do we get news items from lots of reporters and other contributors, we are happily blessed with students and others who volunteer time to help synthesize it.

Bioethics clearly needs a good blog and AJOB is trying to create it. That we happen to run bioethics' most-visited web site does, admittedly, make it much easier to get feedback quickly and from lots of people. We hope you like this thing enough to add it to your daily diet. And please send us your advice.


SHOULD I USE INFORMATION IN THIS PAGE TO TREAT MY PATIENTS OR MAKE HEALTHCARE DECISIONS?

Only if you are out of your mind, or are Jack Kevorkian, or both. Ok, no, seriously, this is our disclaimer:

Statements on this site do not represent the views of anyone other than those writing the posts, nor do views expressed in comments reflect the views of any authors of posts or of the Editors and Editorial Board and publishers of The American Journal of Bioethics. Views expressed herein are not represented in any way to be those of Albany Medical College or Albany Medical Center or Alden March Bioethics Institute or of Stanford University, University of Pennsylvania, or their hospitals or other associated institutions, or the Editorial Board of The American Journal of Bioethics, or Taylor & Francis Health Sciences. Nor has any editor been in any way induced or compensated for expressing any view or discussing any subject on the blog, and, where apparent to the Editor in Chief, any conflict of interest or commitment pertaining to any post will be disclosed as a subtext to any message in which the potential conflict obtains. Nor do the editors profit from the blog or any portion thereof while part of the blog, although of course the authors retain all copyright through the terms of the Creative Commons license on the site, and thus may use or publish any post elsewhere in compliance with U.S. copyright law.

The information on this site is intended for discussion purposes only, and not as recommendations on how to diagnose or treat illnesses. There is no link whatever between blog.bioethics.net and any research project involving any subject of any kind: human,animal vegetable or mineral. No confidential patient or research subject information held by any author of any posting will be placed on the blog, nor should any information you post in comments or email written to the authors or managers of the blog, authors of its postings, in comments, to management, or to our design or technical support staff be considered confidential. Do not post or otherwise utilize confidential information of any kind on this site.


WHO FUNDS THE BLOG?

Here's a list of sponsors from 2005, but in brief, the blog was funded in part by a grant from The Greenwall Foundation (#5-39182 (8), "Bioethics Education Network") to PI Glenn McGee. The blog is independent from the Journal in one very important sense: Taylor & Francis do not fund, support or hold copyright on it. That said, as editors of the Journal we take care to ensure that ads on the blog not detract in any way from the AJOB mission or compromise in any way the editorial process.

THIS FAQ LAST UPDATED: 08/24/08

comments

I'm happy to offer my thanks. You all do a good job.

Sounds like someone has been really gotten a bee in the bonnet about the blog - was it just one or a flurry of emails that prompted this? As one of blog.bioethics.net's blogspawns, it makes me think we better put up a disclaimer on our website, too! Happy New Year, btw, and congratulations on being named one of Time's Persons of the Year! (all of us who blog)

The blog's just having technical difficulties with Blogger 2.0 and feeds in general. Because Blogger felt like giving the gift of technical headaches this year... ;)

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