Ethics

A look at ethics in the treatment of women's cancer

| 2 Min Read

Ethical concerns in the subspecialty of gynecologic oncology are worth singling out for several reasons: The malignancies treated in this field often are aggressive, recurrent and incurable. They frequently occur in young women, and their prevention and treatment entail radical surgeries and side effects that can alter the remainder of a woman’s life. The September issue of the AMA Journal of Ethics explores these concerns in depth.

The issue features:

Help students learn more about this subspecialty

For medical students who are deciding on a specialty to pursue after graduation, AMA Wire® offers the “Shadow Me” Specialty Series, which gives honest advice, observations and resources from physicians in different specialties. If you are a gynecologic oncologist, send us an email to be considered for a potential feature in this series.

More ethics news

Current U.S. medical students have until Oct. 12 to submit their responses for the Journal of Ethics John Conley Ethics Essay Contest. The author of the best essay receives $5,000, and authors of up to three runner-up essays could receive $1,000 prizes. Winning essays are published in the AMA Journal of Ethics.

FEATURED STORIES

Speech balloons

Physicians must tell their own story—for patients’ sake

| 3 Min Read
Profiles positioned as data points across a map of the U.S.

What tops the state advocacy agenda for doctors in 2026

| 7 Min Read
Supportive group holding hands

Time for decisive action on substance-use disorder treatment

| 5 Min Read
Sitting health care worker in a busy hallway

1 in 3 NPs and PAs switch specialties at least once in career

| 6 Min Read