To Tell or Not to Tell: How Different Perspectives Shape the Ethics of Honesty and Concealment
Audience: Public Format: Hybrid
Seminar and Q&A
Tuesday, 16 June 2026, 3pm to 4.30pm
End-of-life bioethics often presents a seemingly sharp divide between Western emphasis on patient autonomy and truth-telling, and some Asian traditions favoring family-centered concealment to prevent psychological harm. This talk unpacks the moral complexity behind this apparent dichotomy. Using the film The Farewell as a case study — where a Chinese-American family conceals a grandmother's terminal cancer diagnosis — I explore how the ethical principle of non-maleficence operates across different cultures. This talk will also attempt to answer the ethical question: does benevolent concealment, even when motivated by care, constitute a fundamental denial of patient agency?
Speaker(s): Roger Chung
Venue:
Big Data Institute - Seminar room 0
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Seminar room 0 Big Data Institute Old Road Campus Oxford Oxfordshire OX3 7LF United Kingdom
Department: Oxford Population Health (OxPop) (Unit)
Host: Ethox Centre
Register here: https://forms.office.com/e/knQPWx3QtD
