Professor Michael Parker is Director of the Wellcome Centre for Ethics and Humanities and Director of the Ethox Centre at the University of Oxford.

Ethox is a multidisciplinary bioethics research Centre that aims to improve ethical standards in healthcare practice and in medical research through education, research, and the provision of ethics support to health professionals and researchers. Ethox aims in all its activities to be close to practice and to engage with ethical issues faced by real world actors in real world settings. Its research focusses on four areas: global health ethics, population health ethics, research ethics, and clinical ethics.

Michael’s own research interests are in the ethics of collaborative global health research, the uses of data-science in population health, and the clinical uses of genomics.

Together with partners at the Wellcome Trust Major Overseas Programmes (MOPs) in Vietnam, Malawi, Thailand-Laos, Kenya, and South Africa, Michael co-ordinates the Global Health Bioethics Network, which is designed to encourage and promote ethical reflection, carry out ethics research, and build ethics capacity across the MOPs. The Network is supported by a Wellcome Strategic Award (096527). Michael also leads the ethics programme of the Malaria Genomic Epidemiology Network (MalariaGEN), which carries out genomic research into severe malaria in childhood at 24 sites in 21 countries.

Michael is the Chair of the Genomics England Ethics Advisory Committee and a non-executive director of Genomics England, which is charged with implementing the UK’s 100,000 Genomes Project. Since 2001, with Anneke Lucassen, Tara Clancy, and Angus Clarke he has coordinated the Genethics Club, a national ethics forum in the United Kingdom in which health professionals and genetics laboratory staff meet to discuss the ethical issues arising in their day-to-day practice and to share good practice. This work has been published as Parker, M. Ethical Problems and Genetics Practice (Cambridge University Press, 2012).