Thursday, November 18, 2021
Remembering Adrienne Asch
Tomorrow is the eighth anniversary of the death of Adrenne Asch. Ellen was a friend going back to Adrienne's Swarthmore years in the late 1960's, and after I met Ellen we visited Adrienne both at Wellesley and in NYC on several occasions, and we were at her bedside both in the hospital in her final days and in her home in her final hours. She was an amazing, witty, brilliant, principled person with great curiosity and insight. She was also a great lover of Bach. She and Ellen came together to one of Blanche's last performances that she conducted - the Christmas Oratorio in 2003 - just after Ellen and I met. I miss talking with her about important issues. She was a bio-ethicist and I had served for several years on the Brattleboro Hospital Ethics Committee, so we could connect on a lot of things. I'll reproduce the Wikopedia article about her - thank you Wikipedia! I'll contribute the next time I use you.
Adrienne Asch (September 17, 1946 – November 19, 2013) was a bioethics scholar and the founding director of the Center for Ethics at Yeshiva University in New York City. She was also the Edward and Robin Milstein Professor of Bioethics at the Wurzweiler School of Social Work and Professor of Epidemiology and Population Health at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, which are both graduate professional schools at Yeshiva University. She also held professorships in epidemiology and population health and in family and social medicine at Yeshiva's Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Asch was born prematurely in New York City, and became blind at a few weeks old from retinopathy of prematurity, as a result of too much oxygen in her incubator. Asch grew up in Ramsey, New Jersey, where she attended school in the Ramsey Public School District. She received a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Swarthmore College in 1969 and a master's degree in social work from Columbia University in 1973. She opened her own private practice in 1979. Before studying for her Ph.D. in social psychology in Columbia University, which she received in 1992, she worked in the New York State Division of Human Rights as an investigator of employment discrimination cases.[1] Asch also trained as a family therapist, and earned a certificate from the Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy in 1981. Before becoming the Director of the Center for Ethics at Yeshiva University, Asch was professor of women's studies and the Henry R. Luce Professor in biology, ethics and the politics of human reproduction at the Boston University School of Social Work and Wellesley College in Massachusetts. Although she supported a woman's right to choose abortion, Asch took a disability justice approach in her opposition to prenatal testing and abortion that would stop pregnancies carrying disabled fetuses. She wrote and lectured extensively on the topic.
In an article in The American Journal of Public Health in 1999, Asch discussed the topic of prenatal testing for disabilities:
"If public health espouses goals of social justice and equality for people with disabilities — as it has worked to improve the status of women, gays and lesbians, and members of racial and ethnic minorities — it should reconsider whether it wishes to continue the technology of prenatal diagnosis. My moral opposition to prenatal testing and selective abortion flows from the conviction that life with disability is worthwhile and the belief that a just society must appreciate and nurture the lives of all people, whatever the endowments they receive in the natural lottery." Asch helped to develop guidelines for end-of-life care with the Hastings Center, and was a strong voice for the inclusion of people with disabilities in conversations about bioethics. Asch also worked with assistive technology designers, advising on how to make devices more suited for academic needs.
Adrienne Asch (1946-2013)****************************************************
Tomorrow I get my COVID booster shot (or whatever you call it!) and we also have a Hallowell sing at Bradley House (a local nursing home).
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