M. Therese Lysaught, PhD

Title/s:  Professor
Visiting Scholar, Catholic Health Association, 2012-2013

Email: mlysaught@luc.edu

About

M. Therese Lysaught, PhD, is a tenured Professor at the Neiswanger Institute for Bioethics and Health Care Leadership and the Institute of Pastoral Studies, Loyola University Chicago, having joined the faculty 2013. For five years, she served as Associate Dean for the Institute of Pastoral Studies, and prior to joining the faculty at Loyola held tenured positions at Marquette University and the University of Dayton, serving terms as Director of Graduate Studies for her respective departments. 

Dr. Lysaught’s scholarly work brings into conversation the fields of theology, medicine, ethics, and bioethics.  She has published on a variety of topics including fundamental investigations in the areas of Catholic moral theology and theological ethics, as well as specific topics such as anointing of the sick, genetics, gene therapy, human embryonic stem cell research, end-of-life, neuroscience, global health, and bioethics and social justice.  She also consults widely with health care systems on issues surrounding mission, theology, and ethics. 

In 2012, Dr. Lysaught was invited to serve as a Visiting Scholar with the Catholic Health Association, overseeing a project on the theological foundations of Catholic identity.  Prior to this appointment, she had served in a variety of advisory capacities with CHA including the Theologian and Ethicist Committee of the Board of Directors (2002-2009) as well as working groups on genetics (2001-2003) and the principle of moral cooperation (2001-2006).

In 2010, Dr. Lysaught was elected to the Board of Directors for the Society of Christian Ethics (SCE), the major professional organization for scholars in theological ethics in the U.S., serving a four-year term.  In 2017, she was invited to join the Editorial Board for the SCE’s Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics.  In 2019, she will join the advisory board of Studies in Christian Ethics, the journal of the SCE’s British counterpart, the Society for the Study of Christian Ethics.  She is a founding member of the editorial board of the Journal of Moral Theology (since 2009), currently serves as an editorial advisor to The Other Journal and Cascade Books, and spent eight years on the editorial advisory board for Christian Bioethics

Since Fall 2018, she has served as a content advisor for a Science for Seminaries Grant awarded to Sacred Heart Seminary in Milwaukee by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).  In addition, she served on the Advisory Board of AAAS Program of Dialogue Between Science, Religion, and Ethics (1998-2001), the the Anglican-Roman Catholic Theological Consultation—U.S., sponsored by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops from 2008-2011, and the Program on Medicine and Religion at the University of Chicago.

In Fall 2018, she piloted, with Emily Anderson, a course in “Global Bioethics.”  Since 2003, her work in global health has taken her to Haiti, El Salvador and Guatemala.  Since Fall 2017, she has served as facilitator and core team member for the project entitled Global Faith-Based Health Systems: Integrating Technology and Empowering Communities, co-sponsored by Georgetown University and the Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK), Trento, Italy.

She spent the year of 1994-1995 as Fellow in the Program in Molecular and Clinical Genetics, Department of Pediatrics and Genetics, College of Medicine, as well as the Program in Biomedical Ethics at the University of Iowa.  The fellowship was funded by the Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications (ELSI) Research Program of the National Center for Human Genome Research (NCHGR) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).  She was subsequently invited to serve a three-year term on the Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee (RAC), National Institutes of Health (1995-1998), an historic federal committee created in the wake of the Asilomar conferences in the early 1970s that oversaw the development of, first, genetic engineering and, in the 1990s, human gene transfer research (a.k.a., gene therapy).


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