An interview with Dr. James Bernat, a history of DHMC's ethics committee, and more information on advance directives

Published: Dec. 15, 2008, 10 p.m.

b"An interview with Dr. James Bernat, a history of DHMC's ethics committee, and more information on advance directives\\n\\nDr. James Bernat, an internationally recognized medical ethicist, is a professor of neurology at Dartmouth Medical School and head of the Ethics Committee at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.\\n\\nIn 1997, and again in 2006, Bernat was one of several scholars invited to Rome to advise the Vatican on how to define death. Reporters from prominent media outlets--from the New York Times to People magazine--often ask him to comment on major ethics cases, especially those involving brain death. He was quoted widely, for example, on Terri Schiavo, the Florida woman who lived for 15 years in a permanent vegetative state. Her husband, her parents, and the courts fought a very public battle over whether to remove her feeding tube and let her die naturally. Terri Schiavo died in 2005.\\n\\nDartmouth Medicine associate editor Laura Stephenson Carter spoke to Bernat about his work on medical ethics.\\n\\nThis is a web extra to an article that appeared in the Winter 2008 issue of Dartmouth Medicine Magazine. To read the article, go to:\\nhttp://dartmed.dartmouth.edu/winter08/html/other_hand.php"