Category: News

The Future of Communication: Brain-Computer Interfaces Take Center Stage Bioethics Education
April 17, 2026

The Future of Communication: Brain-Computer Interfaces Take Center Stage

Translucent image of a brain

(Wired) – California-based startup Sabi is developing a thought-to-text wearable that could usher in the cyborg future.

Speech-to-text capability is now baked into all modern computers. But what if you didn’t have to dictate to your computer? What if you could type just by thinking?

Silicon Valley startup Sabi is emerging from stealth with that goal. The company is developing a brain wearable that decodes a person’s internal speech into words on a computer screen. CEO Rahul Chhabra says its first product, a brain-reading beanie, will be available by the end of the year. The company is also designing a baseball cap version.

The technology is known as a brain-computer interface, or BCI, a device that provides a direct communication pathway between the brain and an external device. (Read More)

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The Meetings You Dread May Be Your Ticket to Job Security in an AI-Driven World Bioethics Education
April 17, 2026

The Meetings You Dread May Be Your Ticket to Job Security in an AI-Driven World

Faces

(NYT) – As artificial intelligence makes many tasks easier, the human work of cajoling, arm-twisting and reassuring appears to be rising in importance.

As A.I. makes the production of knowledge work more and more efficient, the job of presenting, debating, lobbying, arm-twisting, reassuring or just plain selling the work appears to be rising in importance. And the need for those sometimes messy human tasks may limit the number of people A.I. displaces.

“These were always important skills,” said David Deming, an economist who is the dean of Harvard College. “But as the information landscape becomes more saturated, the ability to tell a story out of it — to take a ton of text and turn it into something people want — is more valuable.” (Read More)

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Ukraine’s Robot Revolution: Russians Surrender to Autonomous Forces Bioethics Education
April 17, 2026

Ukraine’s Robot Revolution: Russians Surrender to Autonomous Forces

silhouette of a drone flying in an orange sky

(404 Media) – Volodymyr Zelenskyy is pitching his country as a global leader in robots for war and defense. Will the world listen?

Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelenskyy praised robots as the future of war in a Defense Industry Worker Day address on Monday. “For the first time in the history of this war, an enemy position was taken exclusively by unmanned platforms—ground systems and drones. The occupiers surrendered, and the operation was carried out without infantry and without losses on our side,” Zelenskyy said. (Read More)

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Mind-Controlled Virtual Reality: Monkeys Navigate Virtual Worlds with Brain-Computer Interface Bioethics Education
April 17, 2026

Mind-Controlled Virtual Reality: Monkeys Navigate Virtual Worlds with Brain-Computer Interface

Picture of a macaque eating

(New Scientist) – Monkeys with around 300 electrodes implanted in their brain were able to steer avatars around different virtual environments

Monkeys fitted with a brain-computer interface (BCI) successfully navigated a variety of virtual worlds using only their thoughts. Researchers hope the experiments will pave the way for people with paralysis to explore virtual worlds or more intuitively control electric wheelchairs in this one. (Read More)

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The Alarming Persistence of Black Maternal Mortality in the U.S. Bioethics Education
April 16, 2026

The Alarming Persistence of Black Maternal Mortality in the U.S.

A doctor and a woman talking

(Axios) – Black women remain three times more likely than white and Hispanic women to die from pregnancy-related complications, according to the latest maternal mortality rates released last month by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Why it matters: Advocates fear inconsistent abortion access across the U.S. and anti-DEI efforts by the Trump administration could fuel the continued racial disparities. (Read More)

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The Great Alzheimer’s Debate: Are New Drugs a Breakthrough or a Bust? Bioethics Education
April 16, 2026

The Great Alzheimer’s Debate: Are New Drugs a Breakthrough or a Bust?

saline bag hanging from rack

(NYT) – The review said a certain class of drugs had little clinical benefit, but many Alzheimer’s experts criticized the analysis, saying it unfairly lumped failed drugs with two recently approved treatments.

Since the approval of new Alzheimer’s drugs in recent years, there has been a lingering question: While data indicated that they could modestly slow cognitive decline for some patients, would that effect be meaningful or too slight to make difference?

A new review of research spanning a decade, published on Wednesday, concluded that the clinical benefit of these and similar drugs is negligible. But the way the review was conducted spurred heated criticism from many Alzheimer’s experts, including some who had been skeptical of some of them. (Read More)

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The Sticky Situation with GLP-1 Medications: To Quit or Not to Quit? Bioethics Education
April 16, 2026

The Sticky Situation with GLP-1 Medications: To Quit or Not to Quit?

A picture of a slide adjusting scale

(NPR) – It’s quite common for people to start on GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Zepbound, especially as the diabetes and obesity treatments become more ubiquitous. They’re designed to treat chronic conditions, so the medicines are intended for lifelong use; yet a high percentage of people who start them also quit.

“We found that fewer than 1 in 4 patients remained on a GLP-1 medication after a year,” says Dr. Jaime Almandoz, an obesity medicine specialist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. He looked at insurance claims data in a research letter published in JAMA and found that few patients actually adhere to the drugs for the long term. (Read More)

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The Dark Side of Facial Recognition: A Cautionary Tale Bioethics Education
April 16, 2026

The Dark Side of Facial Recognition: A Cautionary Tale

Shadowed man in jail cell

(NDTV via MSN) – A woman in the United States spent six months behind bars for crimes she insisted she never committed.

Kimberlee Williams, a resident of Oklahoma, was arrested after authorities in Maryland identified her as a suspect using facial recognition software. Investigators arrested her despite her repeated claims that she had never even set foot in the state, reported The Washington Post. (Read More)

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U.S. Overdose Deaths: A Looming Threat from Evolving Street Drug Supply Bioethics Education
April 16, 2026

U.S. Overdose Deaths: A Looming Threat from Evolving Street Drug Supply

beakers and other laboratory glassware

(NPR) – Where once most drug users mostly consumed plant-based substances such as cocaine and heroin, drug gangs and cartels have shifted to producing and selling synthetic substances made from industrial chemicals.

Fentanyl and methamphetamines have been around for years. Now, illicit chemists are adulterating batches of street drugs with a fast-changing and often baffling mix of compounds, ranging from Novocaine to a stabilizer used in plastics manufacturing called BTPMS. (Read More)

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The DIY Blood Test Revolution: What You Need to Know Bioethics Education
April 16, 2026

The DIY Blood Test Revolution: What You Need to Know

An array of vials from blood tests.

(NPR) – Direct-to-consumer blood testing is a growing industry targeting health-conscious patients who want to order their own blood work for the price of a dinner out.

The space is becoming increasingly crowded: both by direct offerings from commercial laboratories such as Quest and Labcorp OnDemand, and by companies that partner with them to offer the testing. Recent blood-testing rollouts came from Oura, which has sold some 5.5 million of its smart rings and is aiming at that customer base, and from the wearable company Whoop. (Read More)

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The Unvaccinated Blood Conundrum: Growing Health Risks and Misconceptions Bioethics Education
April 16, 2026

The Unvaccinated Blood Conundrum: Growing Health Risks and Misconceptions

3 hypodermic needles

(Fox News) – Two patients became sicker after refusing standard transfusions, researchers found

An increasing number of patients are requesting “unvaccinated” blood for transfusions, which can delay care and pose risks to patients’ health, experts warn.

There is no evidence that unvaccinated blood presents any safety benefit, according to a new study published in the journal Transfusion.

There is currently no process for checking whether donated blood comes from vaccinated or unvaccinated donors, experts say. (Read More)

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The Uncharted Territory of Living with an Experimental Brain Implant Bioethics Education
April 16, 2026

The Uncharted Territory of Living with an Experimental Brain Implant

MRI images of the brain

(IEEE Spectrum) – Early BCI users reveal what the technology gives—and takes

More people have gone to space than have received advanced brain-computer interfaces (BCI) like his. But a growing number of companies are now attempting to move the devices out of neuroscience labs and into mainstream medical care, where they could help millions of people with paralysis and other neurological conditions. Some companies even hope that BCIs will eventually become a consumer technology.

None of that will be possible without people like Imbrie. He’s a member of the BCI Pioneers Coalition, an advocacy group founded in 2018 by Ian Burkhart, the first quadriplegic to regain hand movement using a brain implant. (Read More)

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AI Disease Prediction Models Raised Concerns Over Dubious Data Bioethics Education
April 16, 2026

AI Disease Prediction Models Raised Concerns Over Dubious Data

A pipette dripping liquid into a cell array

(Nature) – The models are designed to predict someone’s risk of diabetes or stroke. A few might already have been used on patients.

Dubious data sets are being used to train artificial-intelligence models that are designed to predict people’s risk of stroke and diabetes, researchers report in a preprint on medRxiv. Some of the models seem to have been used in clinical settings although it’s not clear whether this has led to flawed diagnoses. At least two journals are investigating studies that used these data sets. (Read More)

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Surgeon Charged with Manslaughter After Removing Wrong Organ Bioethics Education
April 15, 2026

Surgeon Charged with Manslaughter After Removing Wrong Organ

An empty hospital bed

(NYT) – Dr. Thomas Shaknovsky tried to persuade his colleagues in the operating room that the liver he removed from a 70-year-old patient was a spleen, according to Florida’s Health Department.

When an Alabama man visited a hospital near Miami in August 2024, he reported a pain in his left side, near the spleen. Three days later, he died on the operating table, missing a different organ, his liver, on his right side.

A grand jury in Walton County, Fla., on Monday indicted a surgeon, Dr. Thomas Shaknovsky, 44, on a charge of second-degree manslaughter in the death of the patient, William Bryan, the Office of the State Attorney for the First Judicial Circuit said. (Read More)

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Meta Faces Backlash Over Plans for Facial Recognition in Smart Glasses Bioethics Education
April 15, 2026

Meta Faces Backlash Over Plans for Facial Recognition in Smart Glasses

a pair of Ray Ban sunglasses

(Wired) – More than 70 organizations, including the ACLU, EPIC, and Fight for the Future, say the AI smart glasses feature would endanger abuse victims, immigrants, and LGBTQ+ people.

More than 70 civil liberties, domestic violence, reproductive rights, LGBTQ+, labor, and immigrant advocacy organizations are demanding that Meta abandon plans to deploy face recognition on its Ray-Ban and Oakley smart glasses, warning that the feature—reportedly known inside the company as “Name Tag”—would hand stalkers, abusers, and federal agents the ability to silently identify strangers in public. (Read More)

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