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Zohar Lederman

Researcher at National University of Singapore

Publications -  57
Citations -  414

Zohar Lederman is an academic researcher from National University of Singapore. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public health & One Health. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 48 publications receiving 298 citations. Previous affiliations of Zohar Lederman include Rambam Health Care Campus & Yale University.

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Culling and the Common Good: Re-evaluating Harms and Benefits under the One Health Paradigm.

TL;DR: This work explores whether culling and other standard control measures for animal-borne infectious disease might be justified as part of One Health approaches and describes the principles around which a public health agenda that truly seeks to co-promote human and non-human health could potentially begin to be implemented.
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Family presence during resuscitation: extending ethical norms from paediatrics to adults

TL;DR: It is suggested that the ethical case to justify family presence during paediatric resuscitation (P-FPDR) is weaker than the justification offamily presence during adult resuscitation(A-F PDR), and this claim is supported using three main arguments that people use in clinical ethics to justify FPDR.
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Family presence during cardiopulmonary resuscitation: who should decide?

TL;DR: A novel principle (or, rather, a novel specification of an existing principle) and a novel integrated model for surrogate decision making are relied on and it is shown that this model is more satisfactory in taking the patient's true wishes under consideration and encourages a joint decision making process by all parties involved.
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One Health, Vaccines and Ebola: The Opportunities for Shared Benefits

TL;DR: This paper proposes One Health as a strategy to prevent zoonotic outbreaks as a shared goal: that human and Great Ape vaccine trials could benefit both species, and presents the notion of a ‘shared benefit’ approach.
Journal Article

Family presence during resuscitation: attitudes of Yale-New Haven Hospital staff.

TL;DR: Assessment of attitudes of Yale Emergency Department health care personnel toward Family Presence during Resuscitation (FPDR) recommended drafting and implementing a protocol for allowing FPDR, which should be individualized to the Yale-New Haven Hospital ED setting.