(1920-2013)
Edmund D. Pellegrino, MD was the Professor Emeritus of Medicine and Medical Ethics at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics and the founding director of the Center for Clinical Bioethics, which was renamed the Edmund D. Pellegrino Center for Clinical Bioethics in his honor in 2013, at Georgetown University Medical Center. From 2005-2009 he served as Chairman of the President’s Council on Bioethics in Washington, DC. He was the John Carroll Professor of Medicine and Medical Ethics and the former director of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics, the Center for the Advanced Study of Ethics at Georgetown University, and the Center for Clinical Bioethics.
He received his BS degree from St. John's University and his MD from New York University. He served residencies in medicine at Bellevue, Goldwater Memorial, and Homer Folks Tuberculosis Hospitals, following which he was a research fellow in renal medicine and physiology at New York University. During Dr. Pellegrino's more than 65 years in medicine and university administration, he served as departmental chairman, dean, vice chancellor, and president.
Dr. Pellegrino was the author of over 600 published items in medical science, philosophy, and ethics and a member of numerous editorial boards. He is the author or co-author of twenty-three books, and the founding editor of the Journal of Medicine and Philosophy. He served as a fellow with The Center for Bioethics & Human Dignity and later as a distinguished fellow with the Center's Academy of Fellows.
Dr. Pellegrino was a Master of the American College of Physicians, Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences, and recipient of 52 honorary degrees in addition to other honors and awards including the Benjamin Rush Award from the American Medical Association, the Abraham Flexner Award of the Association of American Medical Colleges, the Laetare Award of the University of Notre Dame, and the Beecher Award for Life Achievement in Bioethics from The Hastings Center.
Dr. Pellegrino's research interests included the history and philosophy of medicine, moral philosophy and the virtue tradition, professional ethics, and the physician-patient relationship.
Prior to serving as a Distinguished Fellow in CBHD's Academy of Fellows, Dr. Pellegrino served as a member of the Center's original fellows program from its founding in the late 1990s until the launch of the Academy of Fellows in 2010. He was a frequent plenary speaker for our annual summer conference: The Scandal of Bioethics: Reclaiming Christian Influence in Technology, Science & Medicine (2011); Healthcare and the Common Good (2008); Neuroethics: The New Frontier (2006); Conflict and Conscience in Healthcare (2004); Remaking Humanity through Biotechnology? (2003); Bioethics at the Bedside (2002); The Changing Face of Healthcare (1997); The Christian Stake in Dignity and Dying (1995).
Beginning in 1995, Dr. Pellegrino was a regular lecturer in the Center's summer institute courses. In addition he co-edited with John Kilner and Arlene Miller, Dignity and Dying: A Christian Appraisal (Eerdmans, 1996); contributed the chapter "The Good Samaritan in the Marketplace: Managed Care's Challenge to Christian Charity" in John Kilner, Robert Orr, and Judith Shelly, eds. The Changing Face of Health Care: A Christian Appraisal of Managed Care, Resource Allocation, and Patient-Caregiver Relationships (Eerdmans, 1998); and co-authored with C. Ben Mitchell, Jean Bethke Elshtain, John Kilner, and Scott Rae, Biotechnology and the Human Good (Georgetown University Press, 2006).
In 2011, the Center honored Dr. Pellegrino in gratitude for the many years of friendship with CBHD through the installation of the Edmund D. Pellegrino Special Collection in Medical Ethics and Philosophy as part of the Center's Research Library holdings.