Lisa Parker, a philosopher, is the Dickie, McCamey & Chilcote Professor of Bioethics, Director of the Center for Bioethics & Health Law, and Professor of Human Genetics in the School of Public Health. She directs the University’s Master of Arts in Bioethics Program and the Graduate Certificate in Bioethics in The Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences, and is a co-director of the Medical Humanities & Ethics Stream in the School of Medicine. She is also a member of the Steering Committee of the Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies Program, an affiliated faculty member in the Department of Religious Studies, and a fellow of the Center for Philosophy of Science. She leads the University’s Research, Ethics and Society Initiative, designed to foster campus-wide discussion of research ethics and the social implications of empirical research, scholarship, and technology development.
Dr. Parker has published extensively on ethical concerns related to the design and conduct of research, particularly genetic and mental health research, as well as on aesthetic surgery, confidentiality, and informed consent. Her research on ethical issues in genetics/genomics has focused on the ethical management of incidental findings and return of research results, pharmacogenomic research, genetic enhancement, and precision medicine. She has a sustained interest in employing feminist approaches to bioethical issues and in the critical analysis of bioethics as a social practice and field of inquiry.
Dr. Parker collaborates with investigators across the University, as well as nationally and internationally, on both empirical studies and theoretical and policy analyses. Topics of her research collaborations range from genomic sequencing and biobanking to depression treatment to traumatic brain injury and mild cognitive impairment. Current projects include ethical issues related to research on artificial intelligence in healthcare, incidental findings in stem cell transplant donors, maternal and child health, enrolling healthcare workers as subjects of research, and neuroscience/neurology.
As Associate Director for Bioethics in the University’s Institute for Precision Medicine, she currently serves as an ethics consultant on studies involving biobanking and whole exome/genome sequencing in different patient populations, as well as the integration of whole genome sequencing data into the Test2Learn educational platform and development of educational modules teaching front-line providers and health system leaders to integrate genomic sequencing into clinical care.
Dr. Parker recently completed her second term on the Genomics and Society Working Group of the National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research for the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), where she has served on the study section of the ELSI Program (the Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications Program) and on national working groups examining the management of incidental findings and research results. She also serves on the Expert Scientific Panel of the Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) Network. She is a reviewer for the Maryland Stem Cell Research Fund, as well as national and international research programs including the US Department of Defense, National Science Foundation, German Research Fund, and Wellcome Trust.
At the University, Dr. Parker was elected to the Faculty Assembly (2022-2025), co-chairs the Institutional Conflict of Interest Committee, co-chaired the Ad Hoc Committee on Generative AI in Research and Education, and serves on the Humanities Council and committees on data governance, dual use of research of concern, human cadaveric material, institutional data review, responsible data science, and women in medicine and science.
Dr. Parker served as a co-investigator for international research ethics training programs focused in China, Egypt, and India. At the University, her courses include Research Ethics and the Responsible Conduct of Research, Bioethics, Ethical Issues in Genomic Medicine and Research (in the Honors College), and Gender, Ethics, and the Body, as well as thirty-two directed reading and special topics courses at the graduate level.