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Troop, Don – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
The sale of bodily goods or services--"body commodification"--is nothing new among college students. But strides in medical technology, the encroachment of market values on all facets of life, and the reach and culture of the Internet have combined to create a fertile environment for people who want or need to exploit the value of their skin or…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Employment, Paying for College, Human Body
Guterman, Lila – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Kevin C. Elliott, an assistant professor of philosophy at the University of South Carolina at Columbia, asserts in the January issue of the journal "Accountability in Research" that the three pillars of academe's attempts to police conflict of interest--disclosure, management, and elimination of conflicts--are beset by serious flaws. Charges of…
Descriptors: Conflict of Interest, College Faculty, Accountability, Research
Guterman, Lila – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Faculty members gnash their teeth and wring their hands when students plagiarize. They cry for offenders to be punished. But now an online text-search program directed at their own work suggests that professors in biomedicine may be just as guilty of paper-writing sins. More than 70,000 article abstracts appeared disturbingly similar to other…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, College Faculty, Periodicals, Biomedicine
Goodall, Hurley – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Medical scientists just starting at universities have been, more and more often, left empty-handed when the federal government awards grants. To offset this, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, a nonprofit organization dedicated to medical research, announced a new program that will award $300-million to as many as 70 young scientists. The Early…
Descriptors: Nonprofit Organizations, Medical Research, Grants, Nontenured Faculty
Monastersky, Richard – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
In the past few months, animal-rights groups have stepped up their demonstrations against academic researchers who use animals, spawning a new wave of concern among scientists. In February, extremists caused a fire at the home of a researcher from the University of California at Los Angeles, and protesters struck the husband of a scientist from…
Descriptors: Animals, Biomedicine, Public Support, Scientists
Brainard, Jeffrey – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
The National Institutes of Health's methods for reviewing and financing academic research proposals are often praised as the gold standard. Some American scientists, though, have recently offered less flattering descriptions, like "broken" and "arbitrary." NIH officials have heard both arguments, and plenty in between, in recent months. They have…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Research Proposals, Biomedicine, Grants
Davis, Lennard J. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2006
The field of disability studies combines several disciplines to address the philosophical, moral, legal, medical and cultural questions emerging from the intersection of biotechnology and identity. Such a biocultural approach is crucial not just for scholars in the humanities to know the impact that science has on culture and the body, but also…
Descriptors: Biotechnology, Humanities, Biomedicine, Death
Brainard, Jeffrey – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
A few days before President Bush officially released his 2008 budget, administration officials announced that it would contain a historic increase in the maximum Pell Grant. The increase in Pell Grants would be paid for by cutting subsidies for student loans, a step that experts predicted could induce lenders to offer fewer benefits to borrowers.…
Descriptors: Grants, Educational Opportunities, Biomedicine, Student Financial Aid
Cordes, Colleen – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1990
A professor of epidemiology at the University of Pittsburgh tracks the fiscal fortunes of the National Institutes of Health. Any tightening of the NIH budget might starve out talented young researchers at Pittsburgh. Support from the agency amounts to about half of all government support. (MLW)
Descriptors: Biomedicine, Budgets, Educational Finance, Epidemiology
Wheeler, David L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1988
The Department of Health and Human Services has proposed new regulations on scientific misconduct and requested ideas on what the government should do about the problem. Guidelines proposed by eight university groups and two science organizations are intended to help institutions draw up their own research-fraud procedures. (MLW)
Descriptors: Biomedicine, Ethics, Federal Government, Fraud
Nicklin, Julie L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
The 22-year-old Whitaker Foundation, the largest private supporter of biomedical engineering, will close in 2006 to avoid becoming a bureaucracy in search of a reason for being. The foundation, with assets of about $442 million, will increase payouts until 1999, then decrease them as it spends its way out of existence. About 95% of grants go to…
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, Biomedicine, Bureaucracy, Higher Education
Wheeler, David L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1989
Two federal agencies proposed conflict-of-interest guidelines that would require scientists supported by government money to file financial-disclosure forms and universities to review those forms and eliminate conflicts of interest. The National Institutes of Health and the Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration proposed the…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Biomedicine, College Faculty, Conflict of Interest
Kiernan, Vincent – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1998
Participants in the January 1999 Internet World Conference on Biomedical Sciences will meet and communicate solely in cyberspace. In many respects, the conference will be traditional, with 56 symposia on 15 biomedical subjects, but participants avoid registration fees and travel costs. Japanese universities conducted four previous conferences,…
Descriptors: Biomedicine, College Faculty, Computer Uses in Education, Conferences
McMillan, Liz – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1987
Undergraduate science education at liberal arts colleges and historically Black institutions will be the focus of a program of grants given by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Colleges were invited to submit proposals to strengthen their biology, chemistry, mathematics, and physics programs. (MLW)
Descriptors: Biology, Biomedicine, Black Colleges, Chemistry
Wheeler, David L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1990
The Association of Academic Health Centers and the Association of American Medical Colleges approved statements on conflicts of interest. University researchers are asked to disclose any significant personal, professional, or financial relationships, and faculty should not let commercially sponsored research interfere with the education of…
Descriptors: Biomedicine, Conflict of Interest, Disclosure, Federal Government
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