A Neighbour’s Helping Hand: A Discussion on the Ethics, Motivations and Obstacles of being a Good Samaritan (The Compassion and Social Justice Lecture Series – Virtual Edition)
Oct 21, 2021
Medical emergencies, such as cardiac arrest, are more likely to occur in locations other than a hospital or doctor’s office. As a community or family member, do you intervene in addition to calling for help? What if professional help isn’t readily available? Please join us as we dive deeper into the implications, rationale and ethics for the different levels of action including how rural and remote communities are tackling the subject.
Date: Thursday, October 21, 2021
Time: 12:00pm – 1:15pm PST
RSVP to Shemim Manji by Oct 19 at 5:00pm by emailing [email protected]
* the link to the online discussion will be sent closer to the date of the event
Featured Speakers
Scott Kline, MSc, PhD
Visiting Scholar in Ethics, St. Mark’s College at UBC and Providence Health Care, Associate Professor, St. Jerome’s University – U of Waterloo
Dr. Jim Christenson MD FRCPC
Emergency Physician, St. Paul’s Hospital, Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, UBC Faculty of Medicine and Chair, Resuscitation Advisory Committee, Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada
With opening remarks by The Most Reverend J. Michael Miller, CSB and moderated by Fiona Dalton, President & CEO of Providence Health Care.