Home » Blog » Acclaimed Professor Talks Current Topics In Biomedical Ethics

Acclaimed Professor Talks Current Topics In Biomedical Ethics

University of Virginia's James Childress Visits Shenandoah for James A. Davis Lectures in Religion

A well-known name in biomedical ethics will take the podium for the upcoming James A. Davis Lectures In Religion.

James F. Childress, Ph.D., professor emeritus of medical education at University of Virginia, will speak at 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 5, and Tuesday, Nov. 6, in Hester Auditorium, Henkel Hall, on the Winchester campus. The event is free and open to the public.

The Monday lecture is “Physician-Assisted Dying: An Idea Whose Time Has Come?” Seven states and the District of Columbia have passed laws that allow physician-assisted dying under some circumstances. Several countries also have such laws. The lecture examines the rapid expansion in recent years in the number of states that have legalized this practice, along with the moral arguments that have been offered for these laws and the ethical concerns raised.

Tuesday’s lecture, “Conscientious Refusals in Health Care: Respecting Health Professionals and Protecting Patients” examines the moral arguments of patients seeking certain procedures or products, and the doctors and health professionals who claim a conscientious objection to providing these procedures and products to patients.

While the most heated debates have focused on abortion and contraception, these are not the only important and troubling conflicts.”

James F. Childress, professor emeritus of medical education at University of Virginia 

Childress was the John Allen Hollingsworth Professor of Ethics, professor of religious studies, and director of the Institute for Practical Ethics and Public Life at the University of Virginia until he retired in May 2016 and became an emeritus professor. He has been professor of public policy in the Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy at UVA and professor of research in medical education in the University of Virginia School of Medicine.

Childress won the 2004 Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society of Bioethics and Humanities and was a member of the presidentially appointed National Bioethics Advisory Commission from 1996 to 2001.

Childress also served as vice chairman of the national Task Force on Organ Transplantation and has served on the board of directors of the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), the UNOS Ethics Committee, the Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee, the Human Gene Therapy Subcommittee, the Biomedical Ethics Advisory Committee, and several data and safety monitoring boards for NIH clinical trials.

He has written several books.

There is nothing one reads in biomedical ethics that doesn’t reference his book, ‘Principles of Biomedical Ethics.’ He’s had a profound effect on the subject in the United States.”

Barry Penn Hollar, Ph.D, professor and program coordinator of the Department of Religion and Philosophy at Shenandoah

Categories: , , , , , ,

Recent News

Gaming computers lined up in the Esports Arena featuring Shenandoah's esports logo.

Shenandoah University To Host VHSL’s First Fully Sanctioned Esports State Championships

Shenandoah Esports partnering with VHSL, PlayVS to plan and produce event on Dec. 13

Exterior photo of Hazel-Pruitt Armory.

Shenandoah University’s Hazel-Pruitt Armory Recognized By National Architectural Design Publication

Designed by ESa, the armory earned a grand prize in Learning By Design’s Fall 2025 Architectural and Interior Design Awards

November 2025 Class Notes

November 2025 Class Notes

Shenandoah PA students present a check worth $10,000 to Winchester Rescue Mission CEO Lauren Clouse.

Shenandoah’s Physician Assistant Studies Program Donates $10,000 To Winchester Rescue Mission

Funds were raised by the annual SUPA Gala, which has benefitted local organizations since 2007

Photo of KidWind event

Shenandoah University Holds KidWind Coach Training Session

Shenandoah Education Students Participate In Hands-On Lessons Related To Renewable Energies

Shenandoah students, faculty and staff pose with the Hong Kong flag.

Shenandoah University Announces 2026 Global Citizenship Project Destinations

GCP participants will travel to Slovakia, Hong Kong, Saint Lucia, Cuba and Kenya in March 2026

Monthly Archives