Between 1952 and 1967, 39,000 British and Commonwealth servicemen witnessed 45 nuclear bomb tests in Australia and the Pacific. Now survivors report devastating health impacts – cancers, birth defects, generational disabilities – yet their medical records remain classified or missing. In this episode of The Discussion, investigative journalist Susie Boniface discusses allegations of a decades-long cover-up, reclassified blood samples, and sanitised archives. With veterans now in t...
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Between 1952 and 1967, 39,000 British and Commonwealth servicemen witnessed 45 nuclear bomb tests in Australia and the Pacific. Now survivors report devastating health impacts – cancers, birth defects, generational disabilities – yet their medical records remain classified or missing. In this episode of The Discussion, investigative journalist Susie Boniface discusses allegations of a decades-long cover-up, reclassified blood samples, and sanitised archives. With veterans now in t...
Voluntary assisted dying: pushing boundaries and the new role for AI
The Discussion
19 minutes
4 months ago
Voluntary assisted dying: pushing boundaries and the new role for AI
Voluntary assisted dying is legal across Australia, much of Europe, Canada, and several US states, with dramatically varying implementations. Some countries permit advance directives for dementia cases, and AI is being developed to replace psychiatrist in the assisted dying process. While some jurisdictions focus on terminal illness with strict safeguards, others expand access to mental illness. In this episode of The Discussion, host Bill Crews examines these complex ethical, med...
The Discussion
Between 1952 and 1967, 39,000 British and Commonwealth servicemen witnessed 45 nuclear bomb tests in Australia and the Pacific. Now survivors report devastating health impacts – cancers, birth defects, generational disabilities – yet their medical records remain classified or missing. In this episode of The Discussion, investigative journalist Susie Boniface discusses allegations of a decades-long cover-up, reclassified blood samples, and sanitised archives. With veterans now in t...