In this article, we will explore Christine Mitchell from different angles, analyzing its impact in different contexts and its relevance today. Christine Mitchell is a topic that has aroused the interest of experts and the general public, generating debates and questions about its implications. Throughout these pages, we will examine various perspectives and opinions to open a space for reflection and learning around Christine Mitchell. From its origin to its evolution in today's society, this article seeks to offer a panoramic vision that invites reflection and critical analysis.
Christine I. Mitchell (born December 8, 1951) is an American filmmaker[4][5][6] and bioethicist and until her retirement in September 2022, the executive director of the Center for Bioethics at Harvard Medical School (HMS).[7][8]
Education
Mitchell studied nursing at Boston University, where she earned both bachelor's and master's degrees in the field. She then studied philosophical and religious ethics and the ethics of care at Harvard University and the Harvard Divinity School, where she earned a master's degree.
1991–2014 - Hospital Ethicist and Director, Office of Ethics, Children's Hospital, Boston.[12]
1993–2014 - Associate Director (Previously Lecturer, then Senior Lecturer), Harvard Medical School Division of Medical Ethics, Department of Global Health and Social Medicine
2014–present - Executive Director, Center for Bioethics, Harvard Medical School
Career
She is known for her role in shaping the field in clinical ethics consultations for morally difficult issues in hospital settings. She is a founding member of the American Society for Bioethics Consultation, on which she currently serves,[13][14] and American Society for Bioethics and Humanities's Clinical Ethics Consultation Affairs standing committee,[15] and most recently, the Ethics Advisory Board of the Human Brain Project's Ethics and Society Subproject,[16][17] funded by the European Commission. She is a former president of the American Society for Law, Medicine, and Ethics, where she serves on the editorial board of its journal,[18][19][20] and the Freedom from Cancer Challenge, where she is a project Advisor.[21]
Prior to her role with Harvard's Center for Bioethics, formerly the Division of Medical Ethics (DME) (where she had been associate director before its reorganization),[22][23][24] she taught ethics and professional courses for medical students and in the Master of Bioethics Degree Program while on the faculty of the HMS Department of Global Health and Social Medicine.[25]
In the Center for Bioethics, Mitchell co-founded with Carol Powers, JD, the volunteer citizen Community Ethics Committee for "informed public input on ethical aspects of health care and health policies."[31][32][33] She also developed the annual Harvard Clinical Bioethics Course,[34] leads monthly clinical ethics and Harvard Research Ethics Consortia,[35] and teaches in the HMS Fellowship in Bioethics Program.[36]
Professional activities
Since 2002, Mitchell has edited ethics cases for The Journal of Clinical Ethics,[37] where she has been on the editorial board since 1989 and is currently its associate editor. She lectures outside Harvard on clinical ethics issues[38] In 2009, the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities formed the Clinical Ethics Consultation Affairs standing committee[39] (CECA) in order to address growing concerns that those providing clinical ethics consultation (CEC) were unqualified.
She is a clinical practice team member of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics,[40] which produced A Blueprint for 21st Century Nursing Ethics: Report of the National Nursing Summit.[41]
She is a member of the advisory committee[42] for the Cambridge Consortium for Bioethics Education,[43] which produces and publishes Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.[44] She also is an advisory board member[45] of the Neuroethics Network (Paris).[46][47]
In 2018, she was elected vice president of the Association of Bioethics Program Directors,[48][49]
Films and media
Mitchell's first ethics media was an instructional interactive computer videodisc in 1990, Nursing Ethics and Law, which she produced with two collaborators.
With filmmaker Ben Achtenberg[50] (with whom she has worked for over 26 years, and sometimes with others) she has produced six documentary videos. She was an associate producer of "Code Gray: Ethical Dilemmas in Nursing", a documentary film,[51] which was nominated for (but not awarded) an Academy Award in 1984;[52][53] their 2002 video, Stanley, about ethical decisions in caring for a patient with end stage kidney failure, was part of a 3-film documentary series
[54] and awarded a 2004 Freddie award for medical media.[55] Their 2003 video, Everyday Choices, concerned a visiting nurse and an elderly patient facing ethical questions about waning capacities and independence.[56]
She is an advisor to The Refugee Media Project,[57] sponsored by The Center for Independent Documentary,[58] also of Boston.
Awards
1983, MNA Nursing Practice Award, Massachusetts Nursing Association (MNA)[59]
American Society for Bioethics Humanities Clinical Ethics Consultation Affairs Standing Committee; Carrese, J. A.; Antommaria, A. H.; Berkowitz, K. A.; Berger, J.; Carrese, J.; Childs, B. H.; Derse, A. R.; Gallagher, C.; Gallagher, J. A.; Goodman-Crews, P.; Heesters, A.; Jurchak, M.; Mitchell, C.; Mokwyune, N.; Parsi, K.; Powell, T.; Powderly, K. E.; Rosell, T.; Shelton, W.; Smith, M. L.; Spike, J.; Tarzian, A.; Wocial, L. (2012). "HCEC pearls and pitfalls: Suggested do's and don't's for healthcare ethics consultants". The Journal of Clinical Ethics. 23 (3): 234–40. doi:10.1086/JCE201223307. PMID23256404. S2CID1848824.
Mitchell, C.; Truog, R. D.; Ethics Advisory Committee at Children's Hospital Boston (2004). "Excerpts from the ethics consult report: MT". The Journal of Clinical Ethics. 15 (3): 302–6. doi:10.1086/JCE200415313. PMID15630874. S2CID44508413.
Mitchell, C.; Truog, R. D. (2003). "A bridge to nowhere". The Journal of Clinical Ethics. 14 (3): 189. doi:10.1086/JCE200314306. PMID14740354.
American Society for Bioethics Humanities Clinical Ethics Consultation Affairs Standing Committee; Carrese, J. A.; Antommaria, A. H.; Berkowitz, K. A.; Berger, J.; Carrese, J.; Childs, B. H.; Derse, A. R.; Gallagher, C.; Gallagher, J. A.; Goodman-Crews, P.; Heesters, A.; Jurchak, M.; Mitchell, C.; Mokwyune, N.; Parsi, K.; Powell, T.; Powderly, K. E.; Rosell, T.; Shelton, W.; Smith, M. L.; Spike, J.; Tarzian, A.; Wocial, L. (2012). "HCEC pearls and pitfalls: Suggested do's and don't's for healthcare ethics consultants". The Journal of Clinical Ethics. 23 (3): 234–40. doi:10.1086/JCE201223307. PMID23256404. S2CID1848824.
^Krakower, T. M.; Montello, M.; Mitchell, C.; Truog, R. D. (2013). "The ethics of reality medical television". The Journal of Clinical Ethics. 24 (1): 50–7. doi:10.1086/JCE201324106. PMID23631335. S2CID10235975.
^Dewar, R.; Cahners, N.; Mitchell, C.; Forrow, L. (2015). "Hinduism and death with dignity: Historic and contemporary case examples". The Journal of Clinical Ethics. 26 (1): 40–7. doi:10.1086/JCE2015261040. PMID25794293. S2CID19937675.
^Mitchell, C. (2014). "Medical missions to Ghana: The ethics of choosing children for cardiac surgery". The Journal of Clinical Ethics. 25 (4): 307. doi:10.1086/JCE201425406. PMID25517567. S2CID33543639.