Profile: Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology, Oxford, UK

The Lancet ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 388 (10055) ◽  
pp. 1972
Author(s):  
Fiona Mitchell
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
Vol 65 ◽  
pp. 283-298
Author(s):  
Tim Hardingham

Helen Muir was a leader in British biomedical research over many years. She trained as a chemist at Oxford and, having started her research on the structure of penicillin, she moved progressively into biomedical research. Helen's major achievements were in research on joint diseases, particularly osteoarthritis, which affects 8 million sufferers in the UK. She identified the molecular basis of the key load-bearing properties of cartilage in our joints and helped to establish that osteoarthritis was driven by active processes and not just wear and tear. This revolutionized research approaches at the time and the consequences are important to this day. Her careful research analysis laid the foundation for molecular cellular research approaches to degenerative joint diseases. She was Division Head and then Director at the Kennedy Institute for Rheumatology in Hammersmith, London. Helen was highly regarded and was appointed the first woman member of the Medical Research Council and later a Trustee of the Wellcome Trust. She was respected for her opinions, which she expressed in a forthright manner. She was very much without prejudice and judged people on their merits. She could not stand pomposity and, although she became a grand lady, she always had a wry sense of humour and liked a good laugh.


Author(s):  
Michael A. Milton, PhD

Discipleship and the Front Page: Public Theology in the Secular Age is an anthology of monographs offered to the general public as a contribution of distinctively Christian thinking about the personal and public implications for following Jesus Christ in “A Secular Age” (Charles Taylor, 2009). The monographs are written by subject matter experts—clergy, and laity; academics and practitioners; theologians representing a variety of traditions within the Church, as well as professionals from business, law, and medicine— with a common mission to leverage their expertise in the service of Christ and His Church. The work is a public theology initiative of the D. James Kennedy Institute of Reformed Leadership, a ministry and program of Faith for Living, Inc., a North Carolina nonprofit corporation. The collection address four areas of public life: Ideas, Daily Life, the Nation, and Triggers. Each area constitutes a division of the collection. Each of the four divisions contains three issues. The twelve issues represent the twelve chapter chapters in the book.


2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 188-193
Author(s):  
Hans-Martin Sass ◽  
Hanna Hubenko

Hans-Martin Sass, Honorary Professor of Philosophy (Ruhr University, Bochum, Germany). Founder and board member of the Centre for Medical Ethics (CME), Bochum, Germany. Honorary Senior Research Fellow at Kennedy Institute of Ethics at Georgetown University, Washington, DC. Honorary Professor of the Bioethics Research Centre, Beijing. He has written more than 60 books and pamphlets, more than 250 articles in professional journals. Editor of the Ethik in der Praxis/ Practical ethics, Muenster: Lit. Founder and co-editor of the brochures “Medizinethische Materialien”, Bochum: ZME. He has lectured in Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Brazil, Canada, Croatia, the Chech Republic, India, Iran, Israel, Italy, Japan, France, the Netherlands, the Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Switzerland and Taiwan. The interview devoted to exposition of the concept of bioethics in America and Germany, as well as the professor`s attitude to the idea of the integrative concept of bioethics. The concept of integrative bioethics has been developed in different countries, a component of this concept is the idea of the need for discussion on bioethics in various sectors of society (not only medical). Equally important in this concept are the definitions of bioethics and the bioethical imperative proposed by Fritz Jahr in 1926. The scientist`s article, which was discovered in 1997, contains a new format of bioethical ideas, as well as a valuable opportunity to enhance understanding the term of bioethics as an integrative science. Interview has been conducted by Hanna Hubenko as a part of the joint international course «Integrative Bioethics». At the meeting it was discussed the experience of cooperation and plans for the future. Cooperation and feedback between scientists remains an unconditional prerogative, also in a pandemic situation (to be continued).


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