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Lauren Sankary, M.A.,  J.D.

Lauren Sankary, M.A., J.D.

Titles and Appointments

Assistant Professor

School
Medical School
Department
Neurological Surgery | Peter O'Donnell Jr. Brain Institute
  • Biography

    Download Curriculum Vitae

    Lauren Sankary, JD, MA, HEC-C is an Assistant Professor in the UT Southwestern Department of Neurological Surgery and the O'Donnell Brain Institute and a Clinical Ethicist at Clements University Hospital. Professor Sankary conducts empirical investigations in clinical and translational research ethics with a strong track record of NIH and foundation funding. Her research applies legal, qualitative, and empirical bioethics research methods to investigate ethical issues in clinical research involving vulnerable patient populations, drawing upon upon her direct experience supporting informed consent as a clinical ethicist and research consent monitor for participants enrolling in innovative neurological research.

    Prof. Sankary began her research career with NIH BRAIN Initiative-funded postdoctoral training examining ethical considerations related to explant of implanted neurotechnology and long-term implications of participation in biotechnology research (F32MH115419). She subsequently led two national survey studies investigating unanticipated challenges that arise in obtaining informed consent in research involving cognitively vulnerable patient populations (funded by NINDS 3UH3NS100543-03S1) and multiple stakeholder views on barriers to remote consent practices necessitated by the COVID-19 pandemic (funded by NIA 3P30AG062428-02S2). She also has experience leading community-based research to address mistrust contributing to underrepresentation of minoritized populations in brain related research, supported by a 2023 Cleveland Clinic Caregiver Catalyst Award. Prof. Sankary’s recent study funded by the NIH Office of the Director investigated ethically optimal approaches to capturing participant feedback and informing research participants in early exploratory neurotechnology research in humans (3R01AT011905-02S1). Her current research supported by an Alzheimer’s Association Research Grant (AARG-22-9744622) employs Delphi methods to build expert consensus regarding responsible approaches to sharing Alzheimer’s disease risk information with research participants. Through her research, Prof. Sankary aims to promote alignment between research and community priorities and address barriers to the ethical recruitment and return of value in neurological research.

  • Education
    Graduate School
    Case Western Reserve Univ (2017), Law
    Graduate School
    Case Western Reserve Univ (2017)
  • Research Interest
    • Clinical Ethics
    • Neuroethics
    • Neuromodulation
  • Publications

    Star Featured Publications

    Featured Featured Featured Featured Featured Featured
    Integrating Agent-Regret with Frameworks for Mitigating Moral Distress.
    Morley G, Sankary LR, Am J Bioeth 2025 Feb 25 2 36-38
    Attending to Trauma, Balancing Power, and Prioritizing Stakeholders in Ethics Consultation.
    Ford PJ, Morley G, Sankary LR, J Clin Ethics 2025 36 1 63-68
    Nurturing moral community: A novel moral distress peer support navigator tool.
    Morley G, Sankary LR, Nurs Ethics 2024 Aug 31 5 980-991
    Re-examining the relationship between moral distress and moral agency in nursing.
    Morley G, Sankary LR, Nurs Philos 2024 Jan 25 1 e12419