Jacob M. Appel is a physician, attorney, and bioethicist who serves as an attending psychiatrist in the Mount Sinai Healthcare System. He teaches ethics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, where he is Director of Ethics Education in Psychiatry and a member of the Institutional Review Board. Appel has been a regular ethics columnist for Huffington Post and Opposing Views, and writes a monthly bioethics column for Education Update. A frequent lecturer on bioethical issues, Appel s essays relating to bioethics have appeared in the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, the San Francisco Chronicle, and many other outlets. When not engaged in bioethics, Appel writes fiction: He has published novels, short fiction collections, and prize-winning stories.
"Appel's scenario approach works well, as readers are challenged to
weigh the morality of decisions in our increasingly complex medical
world. An easy-to-digest compendium of bioethical issues that
provides plenty of food for thought."
--Kirkus Reviews "A fascinating and thought-provoking book that
should appeal to everyone--doctors, patients, and cloned
Neanderthals alike."
--A. J. Jacobs, bestselling author of The Year of Living Biblically
"Important and provocative. Physician, lawyer, and bioethicist:
what a perfect trifecta for the author of a book on ethical issues
in medicine. I read it from start to finish in one sitting."
--Jon LaPook, M.D., Chief Medical Correspondent, CBS News "Dr.
Appel adroitly places the dangerous flames of ethical dilemmas into
a terrarium for careful examination so we don't burn
ourselves."
--Mehmet Oz, M.D, Professor of Surgery, Columbia University, host
or The Dr. Oz Show "Dr. Appel in his extraordinary book has done a
service for the public and health professionals by clearly
illustrating the present and evolving medical ethical issues before
us. This is a provocative and informative read for all!"
--Richard Carmona, MD, MPH, FACS, 17th Surgeon General of the
United States "The most thorough set of challenges in tightly
reasoned and highly readable scenarios that should be read not only
by students and teachers, but by every member of Congress before
they vote on issues with ethical implications, which is nearly
every vote. An important contribution to philosophy and science. I
dare you to try a few."
--Michael Shermer, publisher of Skeptic Magazine, monthly columnist
Scientific American, author The Moral Arc "This book will enliven
your dinner conversation for months to come. Not only is Who Says
You're Dead? a lot of fun; its topic--how technology and ethics
co-evolve--is of the utmost importance."
--William Poundstone, author of Head in the Cloud: Why Knowing
Things Still Matters When Facts Are So Easy to Look Up "I couldn't
put it down. Dr. Appel offers analyses that are spot on! Every
medical student should be made to read this book. Whether
compelling them to do that is ethical or not is an easy
choice."
--Joe Schwarcz, host of "The Dr. Joe Show" and author of A Feast of
Science "Who Says You're Dead? entertains as it educates. Dr. Appel
ranges from organ transplantation to embryo custody to voluntary
castration and confidentiality laws and, yes, even to the cloning
of Neanderthals. It is an exotic journey, and strongly
recommended."
--E. Fuller Torrey, author of Emerging Brains, Emerging Gods
"Jacob Appel is a doctor, lawyer, bio-ethicist, and terrific
writer--the perfect person to pose fascinating ethical conundrums
and guide us toward practical answers. The biggest messes in modern
medicine result when medical technology outpaces medical ethics.
This lively book helps right the balance."
--Allen Frances, MD, chair of the DSM-IV Task Force and author of
Saving Normal "When life seems too simple or dull, open this book.
Pick a conundrum, any conundrum. Within a few minutes, you'll be
transported into imagining your life as impossibly complex and your
decisions absolutely vital. This is a fascinating exercise."
--Jay Allison, producer and host of NPR's This I Believe
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