This book provides a comprehensive survey of ethical issues raised by advanced medical
technologies. The fields leading authorities explore how artificial intelligence, telehealth,
robot caregivers, genetic therapies and enhancement, stem cell research,
neurotechnology, electronic health records, data collection, and digital nudging are
reshaping the landscape of medical practice. Organized around core ethical themes, the
chapters consider how new and emerging technologies transform personal identity, the provider-patient relationship, privacy and autonomy, and social equity. Contributors clarify
the complex values involved in medical innovation and practice, and explore what is at
stake in the current ethical debates around these issues. While offering a valuable
introduction for advanced students, professional philosophers, medical ethicists, and
policymakers, this book also advances the scholarly discussion by presenting original
theses and arguments, making it essential reading for specialists.
Chapter
1. Introduction (David Schwan).- Part 1: The Patient
Experience.
Chapter
2. Telemedicine and the Doctor-patient Relationship
(Simona Tiribelli).
Chapter
3. Advanced Technologies and the Care
Environment (David Schwan).
Chapter
4. Artificial Intelligence: Reliability
and Patient Safety (Luciano Floridi).
Chapter
5. Artificial Intelligence and
Racial Bias (Ryan Tonkens).- Part 2: Regenerative Medicine and Enhancement
Technologies.
Chapter
6. Gene-based Medicine (Including Personalized
Medicine) (Mara Almeida).
Chapter
7. Genome Editing (Including CRISPR)
(Bryan Cwik).
Chapter
8. Cell Therapy (Including Stem Cell Therapies) (Lars
Assen).
Chapter
9. Enhancement Technology and Gene Doping (Julian
Savulescu).- Part 3: Big Data, Privacy, and Autonomy.
Chapter
10. Data
Mining and Consent (Including Electronic Health Records and Wearable Tech)
(Bonnie Kaplan).
Chapter
11. Big Data and Surveillance (e.g., Contact
Tracing, Traveling for Abortion Access) (Lauren Nuckols).
Chapter
12.
Psychological Targeting (from Digital Footprint) and Digital nudging for
Patient Health Outcomes (Matthew C. Altman).- Part 4: Technology and
Justice.
Chapter
13. Equity Issues Arising from Access to Medical
Technology: It Exacerbates Existing Inequalities (Caroline Brall).
Chapter
14. Equity Issues Arising from Access to Medical Technology: It Provides
Broader Access and More Just Distribution of Healthcare (Marzyeh Ghassemi).
Matthew C. Altman has published three single-authored monographs: A Theory of Legal Punishment (2021), Kant and Applied Ethics (2011), and A Companion to Kants Critique of Pure Reason (2008). He is co-author of The Hackett Introduction to Medical Ethics (2025) and The Fractured Self in Freud and German Philosophy (2013). Prior to this edited volume, Altman edited The Palgrave Handbook on the Philosophy of Punishment (2023), The Palgrave Kant Handbook (2017), and The Palgrave Handbook of German Idealism (2014). He serves as series editor for Palgrave Handbooks in German Idealism and Palgrave Handbooks in the Philosophy of Law. David Schwan specializes in applied ethics and moral psychology, with a current focus on the ethical dimensions of emerging medical technologies. His work has appeared in the Hastings Center Report, Bioethics, Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, and Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics. [ Note: Although Dr. Altman is farther along in his career and has more publications than Dr. Schwan, we want to emphasize that this is a co-edited volume, with work done by both Altman and Schwan. This sort of detailed summary of our accomplishments may be used for advertising purposes. On the back cover of the book itself, we will want more abbreviated biographies, like this: Matthew C. Altman is Chair and Professor of Philosophy at Central Washington University and Commissioner for Kittitas County Public Hospital District No. 1. David Schwan is Senior Lecturer of Philosophy at Central Washington University.]