My work focuses on strengthening and professionalizing healthcare ethics. I study how ethicists help patients, families, and healthcare teams navigate difficult moral decisions, and I use insights from legal theory to clarify and support their role. My book How Legal Theory Can Save the Life of Healthcare Ethics introduces "ethics as integrity," a method inspired by Ronald Dworkin that helps ethicists approach complex cases in a fair and transparent way. I also examine whether ethicists should act as advocates in today's polarized climate, and I recently co-edited a special issue of the Canadian Journal of Bioethics on this topic. Beyond scholarship, I work nationally and internationally to develop training standards for future ethicists. I launched UHN's first ethics fellowship, collaborate on Canadian and U.S. accreditation efforts, and hold the HEC‑C certification. At UHN, I support leadership decision‑making, contribute to governance work, and help shape ethical approaches to philanthropy, AI, and open science. I am also advancing improvements in research ethics, including streamlined consent processes in critical care and a new Enhanced Research Ethics Consultation service. Across these initiatives, my goal is to ensure that healthcare ethicists are well‑prepared, well‑supported, and able to promote ethical, compassionate, and trustworthy care and research.