Speaker: Nancy S. Jecker, Ph.D., Professor of Bioethics and Humanities at the University of Washington School of Medicine

Abstract: Some argue dignity is a useless concept that bioethics can do without. Against this view, I show dignity is a central concern for bioethics, particularly for older people. Dignity's importance during later life is part of a broader view I call the life stage relativity of values. It holds that different values emerge as central at different periods of our lives. During early life, caring, trust, and nurture figure prominently due to vulnerabilities that characterize infancy and childhood. By adulthood, greater physical and emotional independence leads to autonomy and self-reliance taking center stage. During later life, heightened risk for chronic disease and disability makes keeping dignity intact a critical concern. Across the lifespan, the highest value for an individual relates to their lifestage circumstances. Ignoring this can lead to life stage bias, especially midlife bias, which occurs when we apply values central during midlife to all life stages.

Session date: 
12/12/2023 - 12:00pm to 1:00pm CST
Location: 
Virtual: Online activity
Dallas, TX
United States
  • 1.00 AMA
  • 1.00 Attendance
  • 1.00 Ethics
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Faculty List: 
Course Director(s)

John Sadler, Professor of Psychiatry & Foster Professor of Ethics

has no relevant financial relationships to disclose at this time.
Peer reviewer(s)

John Sadler, Professor of Psychiatry & Foster Professor of Ethics

has no relevant financial relationships to disclose at this time.
Planner(s)

Ruth Vinciguerra

has no relevant financial relationships to disclose at this time.
Speaker(s)

Nancy Jecker, Ph.D.

has no relevant financial relationships to disclose at this time.