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Charles Marriot Culver

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Nationality
  
American

Died
  
February 24, 2015

Role
  
Psychiatrist


Name
  
Charles Culver

Years active
  
1961–2010

Charles Marriot Culver

Full Name
  
Charles Marriot Culver

Born
  
November 7, 1934
Akron, Ohio, United States

Education
  
Columbia University (B.A.) Duke University (PhD) Dartmouth College (MD)

Occupation
  
Chairman and founder of DHMC Ethics Committee Co-founder of South Florida Bioethics/Health Law Working Group Associate Director Barry University Physician Assistant Program

Known for
  
Founding of DHMC Ethics Committee, founding of bioethics field in the United States

Profession
  
Ethicist Psychiatrist College Professor Writer

Specialism
  
Medical ethics, Genetics

Charles Culver (November 7, 1934 – February 24, 2015) was a medical ethicist and a psychiatrist. He was primarily known for his work in medical ethics and his contributions in founding the field of bioethics in the United States.

Contents

Early life

Charles Culver was born on November 7, 1934 to Vernon and Virginia Culver. He attended Garfield High School in Akron, Ohio.

In 1951, Culver and his family moved to New York City, where he would major in psychology at Columbia University. Dr. Culver did his later studies at Duke University and did his residency in psychiatry at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center.

Death

Dr. Culver died February 24, 2015 in Miami, Florida. He suffered from Parkinson's Disease.
He is survived by his wife, Dr. Marta Culver, a psychiatrist; their son, Martin Culver; and Vicky, Lissy and Michelle, daughters by a previous marriage.

Ethics reform in the United States

Charles Culver was a pioneer in medical ethics. Up until the 1970s, not much work was ever done in the United States regarding the subject. Culver first received much of his national attention after publishing his article Basic Curricular Goals in Medical Ethics in the New England Journal of Medicine later in 1985. This article is said to have been distinguished for prompting much emphasis on medical ethics curriculum in United States medical education.

Along with other faculty at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center (where Dr. Culver spent most of his career), Culver and others did extensive work on ethics consultation and moral theory. Soon there after Dr. Culver and one of his dear friends, Bernard Gert, would found the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center Ethics Committee.

Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center Ethics Committee

In 1975 Charles Culver and Dartmouth College Stone Professor Bernard Gert, founded the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center Ethics Committee. Its primary function was/and still is to provide thorough and in-depth ethic consultation at the hospital. The DHMC Ethics Committee was one of the first ever established in the world and can be said to have been one of Culver's greatest achievements. Due to its foundation, Dartmouth Medical School began requiring medical ethics courses in its curriculum.

In the latter part of the 1970s, the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center Ethics Committee became known as the Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Ethics Committee.

Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Ethics Committee

The Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Ethics Committees was arguably the first fully functional ethics committee in the world. Prior to its foundation, no such committee had ever done such extensive and landmark work. The committee became so large, that, it sponsored national conferences that were attended by students from leading American medical schools.

Political activism

The Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Ethics Committee played pivotal roles in trying to enact laws that aimed at improving ethical patient care. The Committee was active in the New Hampshire state legislature and played a central role in passing the Terminal Care Document and the Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care acts.

The Committee also retained a notable regional influence and assisted other hospitals establish ethics committees. The Veterans Affairs Hospital in White River Junction, Vermont opened their ethics committee in 1980.

In 1992, Dr. Charles Culver left Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center and psychiatrist Charles Solow, MD became chairman.

International recognition

Charles Culver did extensive work in Uruguay, Brazil and Argentina.

Uruguay

Upon being awarded the Fulbright award in 1990 for his nationwide contributions in the United States, Dr. Culver was asked to give several conferences pertaining to bioethics and medical ethics throughout Uruguay. Many of these conferences took place in the country's national Congress (The General Assembly of Uruguay), the Universidad Católica del Uruguay Dámaso Antonio Larrañaga as well as other institutions throughout Montevideo.

Argentina

After leaving Dartmouth in 1992, Culver taught classes at the only U.S-accredited school in Argentina, Asociación Escuelas Lincoln, and with the then dean of the school, Raymond McKay, helped establish the Lincoln University College, a program that allowed students to start their studies in Argentina and later transfer to a university in the United States with accredited courses.

Brazil

Dr. Culver gave several bioethics talks in São Paulo, Brazil. He was awarded the Jabuti Prize for the best medical book published in Brazil in 1996.

Barry University

Culver returned to the United States and settled in Miami, Florida in 1994. He was Associate Director of Barry University's Physician Assistant Program, a program he helped found and accredit. At Barry University, he was also Professor of Medical Education at the School of Graduate Medical Sciences.

University of Miami

For two decades Charles Culver did extensive work with the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and it's Bioethics Program. He played an essential role in establishing the Bioethics Program national conference. It is among one of the oldest and largest bioethics conferences in the world.

South Florida Bioethics/Health Law Working Group

Dr. Culver was of the four founders of the University of Miami Law School sponsored South Florida Bioethics/Health Law Working Group, today known as the Bioethics and Health Law Consortium of South Florida.

Publications

Culver, Charles M. and Gert, Bernard. Philosophy in Medicine. New York: Oxford, 1982. Oxford Japanese edition, Hokuju Shyyppan Co., Ltd., 1984. Translated by Massakatsu Okada and eight others. Excerpts from the book are reprinted in the following anthologies: Contemporary Issues in Bioethics, 2nd ed., edited by Thomas L. Beauchamp and LeRoy Walters, 1982, pp. 184 186; Bioemedical Ethics, 2nd ed., edited by Thomas A. Mappes and Jane S. Zembaty, 1986, pp. 409 415; and Bioethics: Readings and Cases, edited by Baruch A. Brody and H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr., 1987, pp. 55 57.

Culver, Charles M, Editor, Ethics at the Bedside. Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England, 1990.

Gert, Bernard, Berger, Edward M., Cahill, George F., Jr., Clouser, K. Danner, Culver, Charles M., Moeschler, John B., and Singer, George H.S. Morality and the New Genetics. Portola Valley, CA: Jones and Bartlett, 1996.

Gert, Bernard, Culver, Charles M., and Clouser, K. Danner. Bioethics: A Return to Fundamentals. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.

Gert, Bernard, Culver, Charles M. and Clouser, K. Danner. Bioethics: A Systematic Approach. New York: Oxford University Press. This book is in part a revision and second edition of Bioethics: A Return to Fundamentals. It was published by Oxford in 2006.

References

Charles Marriot Culver Wikipedia