The question "what is suffering and how should we respond to suffering well" is critical for medicine and medical ethics. In this new essay (published in CQHE) I argue that suffering must be understood holistically. #Ethics https://t.co/OXCVDk7W2R
join us by zoom at 12 EST on 1/31 to hear @TylerTateMD speak on “What is Suffering & Why does it Matter for Medicine?: Reflections on Suffering, Illness, Ethics, & Health” for our @UMichMedSchool program on health, spirituality & religion. no registration required. zoom ID in pic
join us by zoom at 12 EST on 1/31 to hear @TylerTateMD speak on “What is Suffering & Why does it Matter for Medicine?: Reflections on Suffering, Illness, Ethics, & Health” for our @UMichMedSchool program on health, spirituality & religion. no registration required. zoom ID in pic
New paper out called “Control Freaks”: Evaluating Concerns of Ableism in the Perinatal Environment.
Part of a special issue on Disability and Wonder, published by Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, edited by R Garland-Thomson and D Stahl.
https://t.co/0qD91PFnXJ
So excited to have joined @StanfordMed + @StanfordQoLA +@StanfordBioethx. In reading this, I see motivations and threads of my own life and story revealed in ways I had hardly realized. And indeed it's true, I've never loved anything like a good yarn.
Stanford Medicine bioethicist Tyler Tate found high levels of success in ballet, miming, acting, fencing and collegiate tennis. But his love of storytelling ultimately led him to medicine. https://t.co/elp6PtzwEx
@NoamChompers So true. This reminds me of Stanley Hauerwas saying once saying that you should not speak publicly until you have something interesting to say, a task far more difficult than most can admit.”
I find it both awesome and peculiar how much we academics feel compelled to promote papers we write, since most remain, merely, a labor of love. Or something like that. Regardless, a book chapter I wrote just came out: https://t.co/e7LEjT3lFh
Meet our newest Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics Faculty Member, @TylerTateMD, MA as Clinical Associate Professor in Stanford University’s Department of Pediatrics in the new Division of Quality of Life and Pediatric Palliative Care.