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JMIR: Crowdfunding for Complementary and Alternative Cancer Treatments in Tijuana, Mexico: Content Analysis

These campaigns spread problematic misinformation about the likely efficacy of CAM treatments, funnel money and endorsements to CAM clinics in Tijuana, and leave many campaigners short of the money needed to pay for CAM treatments while costing beneficiaries and their loved one’s time, privacy, and dignity. This study affirms that Tijuana, Mexico, is a very popular destination for CAM cancer treatment.

Nature BJC Reports: Alternative cancer clinics’ use of Google listings and reviews to mislead potential patients

Favorable Google listing reviews of alternative cancer clinics contribute to harmful online ecosystems. Reviews provide compelling narratives but are an ineffective indicator of treatment outcomes.

JMIR: Selling Misleading “Cancer Cure” Books on Amazon: Systematic Search on Amazon.com and Thematic Analysis

Does Amazon platform contain harmful cancer misinformation? This HLI study found that almost 50% cancer treatment books on Amazon contain misleading information, and 70% on first page of the results are bunk filled!

Demographic and psychometric predictors associated with engagement in risk-associated alternative healthcare behaviours

Understanding how to best identify and educate the public on the significant risks encountered with some AH therapeutics is an important part of health promotion.

JMIR Infodemiology: Descriptions of Scientific Evidence and Uncertainty of Unproven COVID-19 Therapies in US News: Content Analysis Study

"Most claims on hydroxychloroquine (79%) were offered by a 'prominent person,' of which 97% were from former US President Trump." "Despite the inclusion of scientific evidence, many claims of the safety and efficacy were made by nonexperts."

JAMA Using Data From a Short Video Social Media Platform to Identify Emergent Monkeypox Conspiracy Theories

TikTok and the rapid spread of conspiracy theories

CMAJ: Donation and transplantation coverage in the Canadian media: a content analysis of story focus over 2 decades

Media coverage affects policy and debates around organ donation and transplantation.

Stem Cell Reports: Diversifying stem cell debates: Including Muslim contexts and perspectives

"For ethical guidelines to be effective, they need to speak to the contexts in which they are intended to be applied."

JMIR Infodemiology: COVID-19 and Vitamin D Misinformation on YouTube: Content Analysis

BMJ Journal of Medical Ethics: Reconsenting paediatric research participants for use of identifying data

Reconsent of paediatric participants upon obtaining capacity should be explicit and informed.

PLOS Global Public Health: Analyzing natural herd immunity media discourse in the United Kingdom and the United States

"False balance in news media coverage of natural herd immunity as a pandemic response legitimized this approach and potentially undermined more widely accepted mitigation approaches."

The Hydroxychloroquine Twitter War: A case study examining polarization in science communication

Our new study, "The Hydroxychloroquine Twitter War", found that social media debate was both highly polarized and mostly about politics. Increasingly, the spread of misinformation is about ideological flags/in-group signaling.

BMC Medical Ethics: Privacy and artificial intelligence: challenges for protecting health information in a new era

"Regulation should emphasize patient agency and consent, and should encourage increasingly sophisticated methods of data anonymization and protection."

BMJ Open: ‘Gut health’ and the microbiome in the popular press: a content analysis

Bottom line: lots of GUT HYPE and little good science. "‘Gut health’ and the microbiome in the popular press: a content analysis"

Preprint JMIR: COVID-19 and Vitamin D Misinformation on YouTube: A Content Analysis

COVID19 and Vitamin D Misinformation on YouTube.

medRxiv: Online user comments responding to deemed consent organ donor legislation in Nova Scotia: a divided public or a few loud voices?

Health and Social Care in the community: A taxonomy of risk-associated alternative health practices: A Delphi study

A need understand alternative health care "not necessarily risk-free endeavours..."

Springer: Peddling promise? An analysis of private umbilical cord blood banking company websites in Canada

Our new study found private cordblood banking companies pushed idea of high value for current future use. Websites did not typically foreground the likelihood of use (which is slight).

Facets: Let’s do better: public representations of COVID-19 science

Let’s do better: public representations of COVID19 science

Journal of Patient Safety: Compelled Disclosure of Confidential Information in Patient Safety Research

The protection of confidential research data is of key importance to clinical patient safety research.

Art in the Pandemic: Paper Lungs

American Public Health Association: Crowdfunding Campaigns and COVID-19 Misinformation

To understand whether and how crowdfunding campaigns are a source of COVID-19–related misinformation.

BMC Public Health: Media representations of COVID-19 public health policies: assessing the portrayal of essential health services in Canadian print media

The study assessed how the Canadian print media represented essential healthcare services during the COVID-19 pandemic, including the controversial decision to include liquor and cannabis stores in essential services lists.

PLOS One: Crowdfunding for complementary and alternative medicine: What are cancer patients seeking?

Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is increasingly being integrated into conventional medical care for cancer, used to counter the side effects of conventional cancer treatment, and offered as an alternative to conventional cancer care. Our aim is to gain a broader understanding of trends in CAM interventions for cancer and crowdfunding campaigns for these interventions.

RSC Policy Briefing: Let's Do Better: Public Representations of COVID-19 Science

COVID science is being both done and circulated at a furious pace. While it is inspiring to see the research community responding so vigorously to the pandemic crisis, all this activity has also created a churning sea of bad data, conflicting results, and exaggerated headlines. With representations of science becoming increasingly polarized, twisted and hyped, there is growing concern that the relevant science is being represented to the public in a manner that may cause confusion, inappropriate expectations, and the erosion of public trust. Here we explore some of the key issues associated with the representations of science in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Many of these issues are not new. But the COVID-19 pandemic has placed a spotlight on the biomedical research process and amplified the adverse ramifications of poor public communication. We need to do better. As such, we conclude with ten recommendations aimed at key actors involved in the communication of COVID-19 science, including government, funders, universities, publishers, media and the research communities.

BMJ: COVID-19 and ‘immune boosting’ on the internet: a content analysis of Google search results

The spread of misinformation has accompanied the coronavirus pandemic, including topics such as immune boosting to prevent COVID-19. This study explores how immune boosting is portrayed on the internet during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Medical Law International: The legal and policy considerations of transplanting pediatric thymus regulatory T cells as an immunotherapy in Canada

Regulatory T cells (Tregs) hold promise for cell-based therapies for autoimmunity and transplant rejection. In Canada, the potential collection, short-term banking, and transplantation of pediatric Tregs leftover from surgery raise legal and policy concerns. Tregs likely fall under the definitions of “tissue” found in most provincial donation and transplantation statutes. With the exception of Alberta’s Human Tissue and Organ Donation Act, the fundamental distinction between donation of tissue primarily for transplantation and secondary donation of by-products of a medical intervention undertaken for the benefit of the donor is inadequately addressed in Canadian law. Most statutes prohibit transplantation except in accordance with their provisions and do not contemplate living donation by minors under a specific age. Provinces could amend their legislation in order to properly enable the transplantation of by-products like Tregs from infant donors. This process is relatively ethically uncontroversial, so if common research ethics and privacy concerns can be addressed, it should likely be permitted.

Obstetrics and Gynaecology: Discussing NIPT on Reddit: The benefits, the concerns, the comradery

As the use of Non‐Invasive Prenatal Testing (NIPT) increases, its benefits and concerns are being examined through surveys, qualitative studies and bioethical analysis. However, only scant research has examined public discourse on the topic. This research examined NIPT discussions on the social media platform Reddit.

American Journal of Public Health: Crowdfunding Cannabidiol (CBD) for Cancer: Hype and Misinformation on GoFundMe

Misinformation around CBD for cancer is widespread on medical crowdfunding campaigns. Given the potential adverse impact, crowdfunding platforms, like GoFundMe, must take steps to address their role in enabling and spreading this misinformation.

Bio Med Central: “Immune Boosting” in the time of COVID: selling immunity on Instagram

The concept of “immune boosting” is scientifically misleading and often used to market unproven products and therapies. This paper presents an analysis of popular immune-boosting posts from Instagram.

Taylor & Francis Online: The consumer representation of DNA ancestry testing on YouTube

Ancestry testing and personal social media accounts were commonly promoted, demonstrating biotechnological hype where promotion abounds and critiques are scarce. Questions persist around the impact of ancestry DNA testing in reifying a scientifically inaccurate conception of race and what impact YouTube videos might have on audiences.

Does Debunking Work? Correcting COVID-19 Misinformation on Social Media

BMC Medical Ethics: The law and problematic marketing by private umbilical cord blood banks

Private umbilical cord blood banking is a for-profit industry in which parents pay to store blood for potential future use. Governments have noted the tendency for private banks to oversell the potential for cord blood use, especially in relation to speculative cell therapies not yet supported by clinical evidence. We assessed the regulatory landscape governing private cord bank marketing in Canada.

OSF PrePrints: Does Debunking Work? Correcting COVID-19 Misinformation on Social Media

One of the defining characteristics of this pandemic has been the spread of misinformation. Indeed, the World Health Organization famously called the crisis not just a pandemic, but also an “infodemic.” Why and how misinformation spreads and has an impact on behaviours and beliefs is a complex and multidimensional phenomenon. And there is an...

JOGC: Non-Invasive Prenatal Screening: Navigating the Relevant Legal Norms

In sum, the law will define and bound the acceptable behaviour of physicians recommending or administering NIPS, and nudge the technology's implementation forward. Physicians and policymakers should be aware of the potential impact of these legal norms on both utilization and public expectations.

Nature: Pseudoscience and COVID-19 — we’ve had enough already

The scientific community must take up cudgels in the battle against bunk.

Érudit: Research, Digital Health Information and Promises of Privacy: Revisiting the Issue of Consent

L’obligation de préserver la vie privée des patients et des participants à la recherche est fondamentale en recherche biomédicale.

Canadian Journal of Kidney Health and Disease: Policy Challenges for Organ Allocation in an Era of "Precision Medicine"

March 20, 2020 Timothy Caulfield, Blake Murdoch, Ruth Sapir-Pichhadze, Paul Keown

Policy Options: misinformation, alternative medicine and the coronavirus

Alternative medicine practitioners are leveraging the fear around coronavirus to sell products and procedures that are scientifically unproven.

Future Medicine: Portrayal of umbilical cord blood research in the North American popular press: promise or hype?

Findings demonstrate the need for continual monitoring of the media portrayals of UCB as stem cell and transplantation research develops and as clinics continue to operate.

Journal of the Canadian Association of Gastroenterology: The Law and Ethics of Switching from Biologic to Biosimilar in Canada

An in depth look in the implementation of nonmedical/'forced' switches by cutting drug coverage for reference biologics and funding only less expensive biosimilars. B Murdoch, T Caulfield January 3, 2020

Transplantation Direct: Public Solicitation and The Canadian Media: Two Cases of Living Liver Donation, Two Different Stories

Two stories of public solicitation for living liver donors received substantial Canadian media attention in 2015: The Wagner family, with twin toddlers, each needing transplants, and Eugene Melnyk, wealthy owner of a professional hockey team. This study compared the print media coverage of these 2 stories to understand how public solicitation was portrayed and whether coverage differed depending on the individual making the plea. A Marcon, T Caulfield, M Toews December 2019

BioMedCentral: Archives of Physiotherapy: The "subluxation" issue: an analysis of chiropractic clinic websites

Based on the controversy surrounding vertebral subluxation, the substantial number of clinic websites aligning their practice with vertebral subluxation should cause concern for regulatory bodies. Alessandro Marcon, Blake Murdoch, Timothy Caulfield November 2019

The Globe and Mail: Unproven stem-cell treatments can be dangerous. The hype needs to stop

Timothy Caulfield Special to the Globe and Mail Published July 10, 2019

Stem Cell Reports: How to Peddle Hope: An Analysis of YouTube Patient Testimonials of Unproven Stem Cell Treatments

Providers capitalize on patient testimonials to market unproven stem cell treatments (SCTs). We evaluated 159 YouTube videos and found patients discussed health improvements (91.2%), praised providers (53.5%), and recommended SCTs (28.9%). In over a third of the videos, providers posed questions to patients, thereby directing narratives and making them a powerful marketing tool. Bethany Hawke, Alexandra R Przybylo, Danielle Paciulli, Timothy Caulfield, Amy Zarzeczny, Zubin Master

Canadian Journal of Bioethics: Health Misinformation and the Power of Narrative Messaging in the Public Sphere

Numerous social, economic and academic pressures can have a negative impact on representations of biomedical research. We review several of the forces playing an increasingly pernicious role in how health and science information is interpreted, shared and used, drawing discussions towards the role of narrative. In turn, we explore how aspects of narrative are used in different social contexts and communication environments, and present creative responses that may help counter the negative trends. As traditional methods of communication have in many ways failed the public, changes in approach are required, including the creative use of narratives.

The American Journal of Gastroenterology: Promotion of Testing for Celiac Disease and the Gluten-Free Diet Among Complementary and Alternative Medicine Practitioners

Boyer, Graham; Caulfield, Timothy, BSc, LLB, LLM; Green, Peter H. R., MD; Lebwohl, Benjamin, MD, MS

PLOS: Media portrayal of illness-related medical crowdfunding: A content analysis of newspaper articles in the United States and Canada

Medical crowdfunding is a growing phenomenon, and newspapers are publishing on the topic. This research analyzed how illness-related crowdfunding and crowdfunding campaigns have recently been represented in newspapers that are popular in the United States and Canada. B Murdoch, A Marcon, D Downie, T Caulfield.

Genetics in Medicine: CRISPR in the North American popular press

Alessandro Marcon, Zubin Master, Vardit Ravitsky, and Timothy Caulfield.

Policy Options: When crowdfunding pays for bunk medical treatments

Crowdfunding platforms have a role to play in countering the misinformation spread by campaigns that raise money for unproven homeopathic treatments. Timothy Caulfield, Jeremy Snyder.

The Lancet Oncology: Patients' crowdfunding campaigns for alternative cancer treatments

Jeremy Snyder, Timothy Caulfield.

NCBI NLM National Institute of Health: Influenza vaccination discourse in major Canadian news media, 2017-2018

Our recent study found much of the media coverage of flu vaccine to be accurate/positive. We speculate misinformation coming from other sources (social media, alt med marketing, etc.) Timothy Caulfield.

Policy Options: Vaccines, public trust and learning from my hate mail

Column by Timothy Caulfield. November 6, 2018

NLM: Spinning the Genome: Why Science Hype Matters

There is a growing body of literature that describes both the degree to which science is hyped and how and why that hype happens. Hype can be described as an inappropriate exaggeration of the significance or potential value of a particular study or area of science. Evidence tells us that this spin happens throughout the science translation process. There is hype in research grants, peer-reviewed publications, scientific abstracts, institutional press releases, media representations, and, of course, in the associated marketing of a new product. There is also evidence that it has played a particularly significant role in the area of genetic research. Science hype is a complex phenomenon that involves many actors. And it is, at least to some degree, the result of systemic pressures imbedded in the current incentives associated with biomedical research. This article reviews what the evidence says about the sources of hype, the social and scientific harms, and what can be done to nudge us in the right direction.

BMJ Open: Exploiting science? A systematic analysis of complementary and alternative medicine clinic websites' marketing of stem cell therapies

Blake Murdoch, Amy Zarzeczny, Timothy Caulfield

Medical Law International: The challenge of human challenge research models: A Canadian perspective

Research in which healthy volunteers are exposed to pathogens or other aetiologic agents that may cause disease remains controversial. Proponents suggest such work is key to understanding pathways of infection and the efficacy of vaccines and treatments. Yet, this research creates ethical and legal issues surrounding consent, participant vulnerability and the potential for harm. Moreover, public trust in research could be compromised if avoidable, serious harm occurs, making challenge research risky. Among Canadian research ethics guidelines, overarching messages are that participant interests cannot be subservient to those of research and that risks must be proportional to likely benefits. Moreover, common law fiduciary obligations to clinical research participants and the deterrent effect of potential tortious or criminal negligence act to reinforce the idea that challenge protocols should be a strategy of last resort. Researchers could benefit from clear guidance directly addressing the unique issues with challenge research.

Sage Journals: Pragmatic clinical trials and the consent process

Publication by Blake Murdoch and Timothy Caulfield.

National Library of Medicine: Marketing of unproven stem cell-based interventions: A call to action

Looking at the proliferation of unproven stem cells marketed direct to consumers we identified some "Co-opted tokens of scientific legitimacy”

Journal of Law and Biosciences: Injecting doubt: responding to the naturopathic anti-vaccination rhetoric

Little evidence to support much of what naturopaths offer. And the sensible advice (exercise, sleep) often wrapped in a blanket of pseudoscience.

CNTRP: Understanding Opt-Out or Presumed Consent - what are the challenges and how would it work in Canada?

This Fast Fact briefly explains the framework and implications of opt-out consent for deceased organ donation, describes the social and legal challenges with adopting an opt-out consent model in Canada and raises important questions to consider. Produced by Maeghan Toews with the input from the CNTRP team and with support from Canadian Blood Services.

Regenerative Medicine: Human gene editing: revisiting Canadian policy

Cogent Medicine: Commenting on chiropractic: A YouTube analysis

Numerous studies have examined health-related YouTube videos, but very few studies have also investigated the health-related discussions taking place in YouTube comment sections.

Combatting Unlicensed Stem Cell Interventions through Truthful Advertising Law: A Survey of Regulatory Trends

Professor Ogbogu proposes the adoption and application of consumer protection legal frameworks, specifically truthful advertising laws and enforcement strategies, as a means of combating the proliferation of clinics offering and providing unproven and unlicensed stem cell interventions to the public.

BMJ: Selling falsehoods? A cross-sectional study of Canadian naturopathy, homeopathy, chiropractic and acupuncture clinic website claims relating to allergy and asthma

Complementary medicine Research

From Kim Kardashian to Dr. Oz: The Future Relevance of Popular Culture to Our Health and Health Policy

Professor Timothy Caulfield transcribes Celebrity and Health Behaviours and Beliefs, Inaccurate and Uncritical Portrayals, Celebrities and the "Prius Effect", Our Celebrity-Filled Future, and Celebrity Conundrum.

Bioéthique Online: Doing Research with Vulnerable Populations: The Case of Intravenous Drug Users

2016 B Murdoch, T Caulfield. This review article considers ethical concerns when doing research on potentially vulnerable people who inject drugs (PWID) in a Canadian context.

JMIR: Chiropractic and Spinal Manipulation Therapy on Twitter: Case Study Examining the Presence of Critiques and Debates

Spinal manipulation therapy (SMT) is a popular though controversial practice. The debates surrounding efficacy and risk of SMT are only partially evident in popular discourse.

BioNews: Event Review: Gene editing - exploring the Canadian context

By Professor Vardit Ravitsky, Professor Bartha Knoppers, Professor Timothy Caulfield, Professor Rosario Isasi, Erika Kleiderman, and Professor Michael Rudnicki

Issues In Science and Technology: Science, Celebrities, and Public Engagement

Timothy Caulfield and Declan Fahy on Science, Celebrities, and Public Engagement in the Summer 2016 Issues in Science and Technology. (www.issues.org)

Science: Confronting stem cell hype

Professor Timothy Caulfield co-authors new stem cell policy guidelines.

Media portrayal of non-invasive prenatal testing: a missing ethical dimension

Commercialization of Non-Invasive Prenatal Testing: Past, Present and Future

Marginally scientific? Genetic testing of children and adolescents for lifestyle and health promotion

Trafficking in Human Beings for the Purpose of Organ Removal and the Ethical and Legal Obligations of Healthcare Providers

The BMJ Opinion: Timothy Caulfield: The straw men of integrative health and alternative medicine

Timothy Caulfield is a Canada Research Chair in Health Law and Policy at the University of Alberta, a Trudeau Fellow and the author of "Is Gwyneth Paltrow Wrong About Everything?: When Celebrity Culture And Science Clash" (Penguin, 2015).

BMC Medical Ethics: The commercialization of university-based research: Balancing risks and benefits

Health Law Institute Collaborates with the Alberta Law Review

NCBI National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health: The Fountain of Stem Cell-Based Youth? Online Portrayals of Anti-Aging Stem Cell Technologies.

Rachul CM, Percec I, Caulfield T

Stem cell hype: Media portrayal of therapy translation

The Obesity Gene and the (Misplaced) Search for a Personalized Approach to Our Weight Gain Problems

Wake Forest Journal of Law & Policy

2015-01-13_Gwyneth

Policy Options: Athletes and unproven stem cell therapies

Angelina Jolie's faulty gene: newspaper coverage of a celebrity's preventive bilateral mastectomy in Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom

Reflections on the Cost of "Low-Cost" Whole Genome Sequencing: Framing the Health Policy Debate

Policy Options: Time to encourage organ donation

"Is a cure in my sight?" Multi-stakeholder perspectives on phase I choroideremia gene transfer clinical trials

Section 8 of the Charter: Cost-benefit Analysis in Constitutional Interpretation

Policy Options: The Paradoxes of Pop Science

Informed Consent and Patient Comprehension: The Law and the Evidence

Policy Uncertainty, Sequencing, and Cell Lines

Ethics and Genomic Incidental Findings

The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) recently issued a statement (1) recommending that all laboratories conducting clinical sequencing seek and report pathogenic and expected pathogenic mutations for a short list of carefully chosen genes and conditions....

Patents and misplaced Angst: lessons for translational stem cell research from genomics.

Reassessing direct-to-consumer portrayals of unproven stem cell therapies: is it getting better?

Aim: To determine whether increased scrutiny of 'stem cell tourism' has resulted in changes to online claims by clinics that provide putative unproven stem cell treatments. Materials & methods: We analyzed historical and current versions of clinics' websites. The study sample consisted of 18 websites included in a 2008 peer-reviewed study and an additional 12 clinics identified through the Google™ search engine...

What's Missing? Discussing Stem Cell Translational Research in Educational Information on Stem Cell "Tourism"

Global trade and assisted reproductive technologies: regulatory challenges in international surrogacy.

Incorporating Exclusion Clauses into Informed Consent for Biobanking

Policies and Initiatives Aimed at Addressing Research Misconduct in High-Income Countries

Position Statement on the Provision and Procurement of Human Eggs for Stem Cell Research

2012 Highlights in Translational 'Omics

The false promise of false science: Homeopathy as pseudoscience

Quacks and Conspiracies

BioéthiqueOnline: Moving to Peer-Review/BioéthiqueOnline: Passage à l'évaluation par les pairs

Police Questioning in the Charter Era: Adjudicative versus Regulatory Rule-Making and the Problem of False Confessions

Stem cell research, scientific freedom and the commodification concern

Policy Options: Talking Science - Commercialization Creep

Nudge or Not: Can Incentives Change Health Behaviours?

Patents or Commercialization Pressure? A (Speculative) Search for the Right Target

Is belief larger than fact: expectations, optimism and reality for translational stem cell research.

Non-refundable Tax Credits Are an Inequitable Policy Instrument for Promoting Physical Activity Among Canadian Children

Global Update: Canada

Policy Options: First Steps - Keeping stem cell tourists grounded

Public Perceptions and Biobanking: What Does the Research Really Say?

the CCSVI Wave Sweeps Saskatchewan

Biobanking, Consent, and Control: A Survey of Albertans on Key Research Ethics Issues

Regulation of stem cell-based therapies in Canada: current issues and concerns.

Biobanks, Consent and Claims of Consensus

Attitudes Toward Strategies to Increase Organ Donation: Views of the General Public and Health Professionals

The evolution of policy issues in stem cell research: an international survey

Editorials (Stem Cell Tourism in the Era of Personalized Medicine: What We Know, and What We Need to Know)

Chinese newspaper coverage of genetically modified organisms

Science and the Sources of Hype

Stem Cell Tourism and Canadian Family Physicians

Synthetic biology confronts publics and policy makers: challenges for communication, regulation and commercialization.

Policy Paradoxes: The Commercialization of Stem Cell Research

Legal liability and research ethics boards: the case of neuroimaging and incidental findings.

The ethics of moral compromise for stem cell research policy

Commentary: the law, unproven CAM and the two-hats fallacy

Commercialization versus open science: Making sense of the message (s) in the bottle

Open Science Versus Commercialization: A Modern Research Conflict?

Personal Medicine - The New Banking Crisis

Recalibrating intellectual property rights to enhance translational research collaborations.

Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing: Perceptions, Problems, and Policy Responses

Financial Incentives for Weight Loss and Healthy Behaviours

Impulse Control and Criminal Responsibility: Lessons from Neuroscience

Promoting research on research integrity in Canada

Athletes' Use of Unproven Stem Cell Therapies: Adding to Inappropriate Media Hype?

Patents or commercialisation pressure?: A (speculative) search for the right target

Integrating Emerging Technologies into Chemical Safety Assessment

Nudge or Not: Can Incentives Change Health Behaviours?

Should we call it fraud?

Legal and Policy Measures to Promote Healthy Behaviour: Using Incentives and Disincentives to Control Obesity

Erratum: Personal medicine-the new banking crisis

Research Ethics Challenges in Neuroimaging Research: A Canadian Perspective

Studies in Ethics, Law, and Technology

Enabling advanced cell therapies (EnACT): invitation to an online forum on resolving barriers to clinical translation

Taxing Sugar-Sweetened Beverages for Public Health: Legal and Policy Issues in Canada

Human Health Care: The Promise of Animal Biotechnology

Looking back at genomic medicine in 2011

BMC: Supported by science?: What Canadian naturopaths advertise to the public

Naturopaths provide unproven therapies

Nature Biotechnology: Science communication reconsidered

Effective science communication is about more than addressing info deficits.