| July 12, 2005
Penn to Provide Bioethics Training
to Emerging Scientists
Collaboration with Nationally Recognized
Jackson Laboratory
(Philadelphia, PA) -- The Center for Bioethics at the
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
will offer a comprehensive bioethics course to high
school and college students from across the country
who are participating in the prestigious Jackson Laboratory
Summer Student Program. Jackson Laboratory, in Bar Harbor,
Maine, is the world's largest mammalian genetic research
facility.
A central premise behind the course is that ethical
training for young people preparing for scientific careers
is vital for ensuring ethical conduct during the students’
professional lives. The course will begin with an historical
survey of classic cases in bioethics, proceed through
themes in research ethics, and conclude with discussions
of up-to-the-minute bioethical issues, including stem-cell
research and animal research ethics.
“We are honored by the confidence expressed in
us by the Jackson Laboratory,” said Arthur
Caplan, PhD, director of the Center and chair
of the Department of Medical Ethics at Penn. “This
team-up will allow us to work with some of the brightest
young people entering the life sciences in the nation
and with one of America’s premier private research
institutions.”
Barbara Knowles, PhD, Vice President for Training, Education
& External Scientific Collaborations at Jackson
Laboratory said “It is crucially important to
impart the importance of ethics to students at the front
end of their careers, when habits and predispositions
are formed early and persist for decades. The University
of Pennsylvania Center for Bioethics has a stellar international
reputation, and we’re extremely pleased to be
collaborating with them.”
The ethics training component is funded by a three-year
National Science Foundation Grant, which begins this
summer. The program will be conducted by Dominic
A. Sisti, a researcher at Penn’s Center
for Bioethics. “With the wide range of ethical
issues that most scientists will confront throughout
their careers, it’s essential to ensure that they
begin early to consider the ethical ramifications and
aspects of their work,” said Sisti.
The Center for Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine is a leader in bioethics research
and its deployment in the ethical, efficient, and compassionate
practice of the life sciences and medicine. The Center
has become a world-renowned educational and research
enterprise that employs over 20 full and part-time faculty
with appointments in a number of schools and departments
at Penn including medicine, law, nursing, business,
education, philosophy, psychology, sociology, religious
studies, public policy, and public health. It is currently
celebrating its 10th anniversary.
The Jackson Laboratory, a non-profit institution, is
the world's largest mammalian genetic research facility.
The laboratory serves the global scientific community
as the key provider of critical genetic resources and
is a center for training present and future scientists.
The Jackson Laboratory is at the forefront of the genetics
revolution that is transforming medicine for the benefit
of humanity. Additionally, each year the Laboratory
supplies universities, medical schools and research
laboratories all over the world with approximately two
million JAX®Mice from more than 2,500 varieties,
97 percent of which are available only from The Jackson
Laboratory.
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PENN Medicine is a $2.7 billion
enterprise dedicated to the related missions of medical
education, biomedical research, and high-quality patient
care. PENN Medicine consists of the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine (founded in 1765 as the nation's
first medical school) and the University of Pennsylvania
Health System.
Penn’s School of Medicine is ranked #2 in
the nation for receipt of NIH research funds; and ranked
#4 in the nation in U.S. News & World Report’s
most recent ranking of top research-oriented medical
schools. Supporting 1,400 fulltime faculty and 700 students,
the School of Medicine is recognized worldwide for its
superior education and training of the next generation
of physician-scientists and leaders of academic medicine.
The University of Pennsylvania Health System includes:
its flagship hospital, the Hospital of the University
of Pennsylvania, consistently rated one of the nation’s
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hospital; Penn Presbyterian Medical Center; a faculty
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