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Canadian-German medical ethicist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eike-Henner Kluge FRSC is the first medical ethics expert witness recognized by Canadian courts. Dr. Kluge has acted as an expert witness in Alberta, British Columbia, and Ontario.[1] He is known for his work on contentious medical ethics issue such as abortion and the ethics of deliberate death in addition to privacy and medical informatics.[2][3] He established and was the first director of the Canadian Medical Association Department of Ethics and Legal Affairs.[4][5] Dr. Kluge is the author of the International Medical Informatics Association's code of ethics and their ethics handbook.[6] Additionally, he is a fellow in the Royal Society of Canada.[2]
PhD Eike-Henner Kluge | |
---|---|
Nationality | Canadian German |
Alma mater | University of Calgary University of Michigan |
Awards | Royal Society of Canada, Abbyann Lynch Medal |
Main interests | Biomedical (Medical Ethics) and information ethics, topics in the history of philosophy. |
While the director of the Canadian Medical Association ethics and legal affairs, Dr. Kluge in 1991 drafted an analysis for a Senate committee about Bill C-43, which would sentence doctors to two years in jail for performing abortions where a woman's health is not at risk. Kluge viewed that the bill was flawed ethically. His presentation may have swayed two votes to change resulting in an unprecedented tied vote in January 1991 which resulted in the Senate not passing the Bill C-43.[7]
He was an expert witness in Rodriguez v British Columbia (AG) which was the first case to challenge section 241(b) of the Criminal Code and Carter v Canada (AG). Dr Kluge acted as ethics advisor to Sue Rodriguez.[8] He argues that, "there is no right to die—but there is a right to shape and end our lives in keeping with our competently-held values...It is all a matter of autonomy, beneficence and non-malfeasance."[9] Eike-Henner was also an expert witness in Carter v Canada (AG).
Dr Kluge's complaint to the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada led to the Law School Admission Council's no longer being able to fingerprint LSAT test takers in Canada.[10]
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