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About the Center for Health Care Ethics

The Albert Gnaegi Center for Health Care Ethics at 性奴调教 supports scholarship and community engagement activities that bridge secular and religious discourse. With areas of focus including clinical care, marginalized voices, and emerging biotechnology, the Gnaegi Center brings 性奴调教鈥檚 Catholic, Jesuit tradition into the interdisciplinary study of philosophical and theological bioethics.

The Gnaegi Center has a long history of serving health care institutions through consultations and educational programs. It has received more than $2 million in research funding from government agencies and foundations, including grants from the National Institutes of Health and SSM Health Care. The center has sponsored lectures, symposia, and visiting professorships that foster critical dialogue on perennial and emerging issues in clinical, research and public health ethics, as well as the philosophical and theological foundations for approaching such issues.

Students can pursue a Ph.D. in health care ethics while completing professional training in law or medicine. The center offers three dual-degree programs: M.D./Ph.D., J.D./Ph.D. and M.A./Ph.D.

History of the Center

The Albert Gnaegi Center for Health Care Ethics was established in 1979 to provide ethics education and consultations at the 性奴调教 School of Medicine. It has grown into an independent academic department with diverse faculty, vibrant research and excellent educational offerings.

Throughout this time, center faculty has influenced numerous bioethics debates in American society, serving as consultants to the Nancy Beth Cruzan case, NASA, the Institute of Medicine, the United Network for Organ Sharing, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Center for Health Care Ethics Timeline

1979: The Center for Health Care Ethics is established

Founded by Kevin O'Rourke, OP, JCD, the center鈥檚 original mission is to provide education and consultations, particularly within the School of Medicine and throughout Catholic health care.

1980s: The center鈥檚 educational mission at 性奴调教 expands

New health sciences programs are added and the center develops a strong reputation for its continuing education summer institutes, which serve more than 100 people each year.

1986: The center receives endowment gifts

The annual Reverend Edward J. Drummond, S.J., Lecture in Health Care Ethics is established in honor of the first vice president of 性奴调教鈥檚 School of Medicine. Speakers include Ezekiel Emanuel, Edmond Pellegrino, Daniel Sulmasy and other prominent scholars.

1993: Health Care Ethics USA is established

Originally under the editorship of Kevin O'Rourke, the periodical has been published in partnership with the Catholic Health Association since 2007.

1996: Students enroll in the Ph.D. in Health Care Ethics program

The center begins functioning as an academic department. Its mission develops in critical ways, as it establishes an increasingly multidisciplinary faculty and a greater emphasis on research publications and grants.

1999: The certificate in empirical research methods is established

The optional program allows students to complete 15 hours of coursework in empirical research methods, enabling them to gather original dissertation data from surveys, interviews or focus groups. The program is the first of its kind, anticipating the movement toward empirical research in bioethics.

2000: The center obtains its first grant from the National Institutes of Health

The center also partners with the School of Medicine to establish an M.D./Ph.D. dual-degree program. It has since obtained more than $2 million in research funding from government agencies and foundations.

2005: The center offers a certificate in clinical health care ethics

The Ph.D. program also begins collaborating with the 性奴调教 School of Law to establish a dual-degree J.D./Ph.D. health care ethics program.

2009: The center offers an M.A. in theology/Ph.D. health care ethics

In cooperation with the Aquinas Institute of Theology, the center offers students a dual degree in health care ethics and theology. The center is also renamed the Albert Gnaegi Center for Health Care Ethics to honor the contributions of Dr. Albert Gnaegi to 性奴调教.

2010: The center moves to the Salus Center

The Social Science Research Group is established and the center begins teaching undergraduate humanities courses.

2012: An undergraduate minor in health care ethics is introduced

The 15-credit hour minor offers undergraduate students an opportunity to discuss the ethical questions that occur in health care systems.

2015: The center introduces a joint Ph.D. in health care ethics and theology

A partnership with the Department of Theological Studies produces graduates with a well-rounded understanding of ethics based on Catholic health care.

2017: The center moves into the College of Arts and Sciences and is established as an academic department within the college

The move into the College of Arts and Sciences allows the center to implement an undergraduate major as well as to align itself with other humanities disciplines.

2019: The center launches an undergraduate major in bioethics and health studies

The bioethics and health studies major provides students with the tools to analyze the ethical questions raised by advances in medical and scientific technology. It examines these questions both in the clinical context and in health policy. 

2021: The center introduces a joint Ph.D. in philosophy and bioethics  

A partnership with the Department of Philosophy produces graduates with the capacity to engage bioethical issues through a philosophical lens such as ethical theory, social/political philosophy, metaphysics, epistemology or the philosophy of science.

2024: The Department of Health Care Ethics formally separates from the Gnaegi Center

The HCE department offers undergraduate and graduate degree programs, while the center sponsors interdisciplinary scholarly and community engagement activities.