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Bio | Recent Publications | Recent Talks | Honors, Awards, Grants | Courses | Curriculum Vita (PDF) Dr. Thomas R. McCormick
joined the faculty at the University of Washington's School of Medicine
in 1974 to develop a program in biomedical ethics. He teaches a variety
of elective courses in bioethics and is responsible for the ethics
component in the required core curriculum. In the clinical context,
Dr. McCormick instituted a twice monthly ethics conference in the
level three NICU at University Hospital. He formerly served on the
ethics advisory board for the in vitro fertilization program in reproductive
medicine and the cardiac transplant program at UHMC. Dr. McCormick
is an ethics consultant for Harborview Medical Center, one of the
UW's major teaching hospitals, and served as a founding member of
the ethics committee. He also serves as ethics consultant for research
at the Fred Hutchinson Research Center and for Hospice of Seattle. Dr. McCormick received his Doctoral degree in Ethics from Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas. In 1972-1973 he was a postdoctoral fellow in medical ethics at the Texas Medical Center, Houston, Texas. In 1980, Spring semester, he was a postdoctoral fellow in clinical ethics in the University of Tennessee Medical Center, Memphis, Tennessee. McCormick has authored a number of articles in the field of medical ethics. Recent publications include: "Patient Perspectives on Dying and on the Care of Dying Patients," in the Western Journal of Medicine, September 1995; "When Life Support is Questioned Early in the Care of Patients with Cervical-Level Quadriplegia," in the New England Journal of Medicine, with Patterson et al, in 1993. McCormick has also contributed a chapter entitled, "Ethical Issues in Caring for the Gerontological Patient" for the nursing text from Lippincott as well as a chapter entitled, "The Terminal Phase of Illness" in a Medical-Surgical Nursing Text by Lippincott. Dr. McCormick has produced a number of teaching videotapes including a series on "Death and Dying" with Dr. Elizabeth Kubler-Ross through the School of Medicine, a series on "Medical Ethics" published by Everett Community College, and a series entitled, "Coping with Serious Illness, Death, and Grief," published by the University of Washington Press. His October, 1993 article in ANNA Journal addresses "Ethical Issues in the Care of Patients in End Stage Renal Disease." Dr. McCormick had an invited chapter entitled BIOETICA published by: UTEP Publishing, Torino, Italy in 1995. Dr. McCormick has lectured widely in the United States, also in Canada, Italy, Japan and Taiwan. He is a member of the American Society for Bioethics & Humanities (ASBH). He serves on a number of university committees and agency boards, is on the medical advisory board for Cancer Lifeline, is the ethics advisor to Hospice of Seattle, and a founding board member for the Women’s Bioethics Project in Seattle. He has served as consultant to a number of hospitals, nursing homes and retirement centers in the Northwest and assisted in setting up and training hospital ethics committees. His current research interests include an examination of transcultural
aspects in ethical decision making, including cultural variances
in the relationship between patients and health care providers.
Dr. McCormick
is also interested in improving the quality of education in "death
and dying" in medical schools and was recently appointed to a
National Task Force investigating this topic, representing the UW School
of Medicine on a grant from the Greenwall Foundation managed by Choice
in Dying, a New York based agency supporting death education. This
task force report has been published as: Nelson W, McCormick TR (et
al) "Goals and Strategies for Teaching Death and Dying in Medical
Schools," (A consensus statement from eleven participating medical
schools) Journal of Palliative Medicine, Volume 3, Number 1, Spring
2000, pp.07-16.
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