Academic bioethics has never been popular with Republicans. Libertarians dislike academic bioethics because it seems too elitist and anti-free market. Religious thinkers worry it is technocratic, soulless and crassly utilitarian. Now with Trumpism add a populist disdain for expertise, experts and the scientific method and you have a stew that means few of you reading this will find a rapt audience in Washington for many years to come.
Donald Trump needs to appease the paleocons and religious right to get things done. This makes it likely that bioethics will be swept back into the culture wars of the Bush era. Abortion, contraception, sexuality, embryo research, gene engineering, enhancement issues, chimera formation, gender reassignment–all are back on the table.
Existing oversight of human research—FDA, OHRP, etc., will be strongly challenged as too restrictive and inimical to autonomy. “Conscience” will be very much in vogue. The vaccine wars will heat up in terms of mandates and choice. Individual rights will dominate arguments favoring the public good. Public health ethics will become hugely contentious.
Trump and a GOP congress mean the end of the ACA. Academic bioethics will be more “oppositional,” more concerned for the vulnerable while being accused of being both elitist and overtly partisan.
In policy there will be more disrespect in government for science, “facts,” and scientific expertise. Worries about conflicts of interest will wane.
This means a rejection of scientific consensus about climate, vaccines, and evolution. The need for clinical trials to gain access to drugs or devices will be challenged–hard. The role of pollution in spoiling health will be disputed and, since bioethics is not tightly connected to environmental ethics, it had better rethink that gap. Scientific findings about race, ethnicity, homosexuality, and gender are all likely to carry less weight. Conservative ideology and religion will be heard loudly; scientists less so. Dr. Oz will flourish. Alternative medicine will gain in influence.
A Trump presidency means the American economy will be less stable, with a smaller tax base, and so government funding for biomedicine will slow. Government funding for bioethics will shrink even further.
Attracting the best and brightest from around the world to a nation with a regime seen as hostile to scientific expertise and to diversity will be harder. Oddly, business may be a greater friend to bioethics than government.
I see tougher times for a scientifically grounded public policy in the USA. Respect for empirical methods and evidence will further slide and weaken. The notion that facts ought to guide policy is now just a point of view, not a moral presumption.
Since Trump is a triumph of, like it or not, a set of values, bioethics is in for some self-assessment and a tough hand to hand combat. If we are to endure then there is no room for elitism, snobbery, pretense, or moral superiority in our future.
Arthur Caplan, a Hastings Center Fellow, is founder of the Division of Medical Ethics at NYU Langone Medical Center. A version of this essay originally appeared on Bioethics.net.
Published on: November 9, 2016
Published in: Bioethics, Clinical Trials and Human Subjects Research, Health and Health Care, Health Care Reform & Policy, Human Reproduction, Medicine & Business, Public Health, Stem Cells
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