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3.
Science ; 360(6385): p. 158-159, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | Sec. Est. Saúde SP, SESSP-IBPROD, Sec. Est. Saúde SP | ID: but-ib15305
5.
J Med Ethics ; 35(10): 616-20, 2009 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19793942

RESUMEN

The practice of transplantation of vital organs from "brain-dead" donors is in a state of theoretical disarray. Although the law and prevailing medical ethics treat patients diagnosed as having irreversible total brain failure as dead, scholars have increasingly challenged the established rationale for regarding these patients as dead. To understand the ethical situation that we now face, it is helpful to revisit the writings of the philosopher Hans Jonas, who forcefully challenged the emerging effort to redefine death in the late 1960s.


Asunto(s)
Discusiones Bioéticas , Ética Médica , Experimentación Humana , Obtención de Tejidos y Órganos/ética , Muerte Encefálica/legislación & jurisprudencia , Comités de Ética/ética , Experimentación Humana/ética , Experimentación Humana/legislación & jurisprudencia , Humanos , Obtención de Tejidos y Órganos/legislación & jurisprudencia
6.
J Med Ethics ; 35(7): 445-9, 2009 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19567696

RESUMEN

Risk-benefit assessment is a routine requirement for research ethics committees that review and oversee biomedical research with human subjects. Nevertheless, it remains unclear how to weigh and balance risks to research participants against the social benefits that flow from generating biomedical knowledge. In this article, we address the question of whether there are any reasonable criteria for defining the limit of permissible risks to individuals who provide informed consent for research participation. We argue against any a priori limit to permissible research risks. However, attention to the uncertainty of potential social benefit that can be derived from any particular study warrants caution in exposing prospective research participants to a substantial likelihood of serious harm.


Asunto(s)
Comités de Ética en Investigación/ética , Investigación/normas , Medición de Riesgo/ética , Humanos , Sujetos de Investigación/psicología
7.
J Med Ethics ; 34(9): e17, 2008 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18757617

RESUMEN

UNLABELLED: Current guidelines on investigators' responsibilities to communicate research results to study participants may differ on (1) whether investigators should proactively re-contact participants, (2) the type of results to be offered, (3) the need for clinical relevance before disclosure, and (4) the stage of research at which results should be offered. Lack of consistency on these issues, however, does not undermine investigators' obligation to offer to disclose research RESULTS: an obligation rooted firmly in the principle of respect for research participants.


Asunto(s)
Revelación/ética , Deber de Recontacto/ética , Experimentación Humana/ética , Sujetos de Investigación/psicología , Ética en Investigación , Humanos , Investigadores/ética , Relaciones Investigador-Sujeto/ética , Relaciones Investigador-Sujeto/psicología
8.
J Med Ethics ; 34(5): 389-92, 2008 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18448723

RESUMEN

Payment for research participation has raised ethical concerns, especially with respect to its potential for coercion. We argue that characterising payment for research participation as coercive is misguided, because offers of benefit cannot constitute coercion. In this article we analyse the concept of coercion, refute mistaken conceptions of coercion and explain why the offer of payment for research participation is never coercive but in some cases may produce undue inducement.


Asunto(s)
Ensayos Clínicos como Asunto/economía , Coerción , Ética en Investigación , Adulto , Ensayos Clínicos como Asunto/ética , Humanos , Consentimiento Informado/ética
9.
J Med Ethics ; 34(3): 198-201, 2008 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18316463

RESUMEN

Data monitoring committees often are employed to review interim findings of randomised controlled trials. Interim findings are kept confidential until the data monitoring committee finds that they provide sufficiently compelling evidence regarding efficacy, typically because they have crossed the pre-defined statistical boundaries, or they raise serious concerns about safety. While this practice is vital to maintaining the scientific integrity of controlled trials and thereby ensuring their social value, it has been criticised as unethical. Commentators argue that withholding interim findings from research participants is deceptive, inconsistent with valid informed consent, and a violation of respect for participants' autonomy. The present article examines these arguments, focusing specifically on confidential data monitoring for efficacy. This practice need not be deceptive provided its use is disclosed to prospective research participants. In addition, confidential data monitoring does not make research participants worse off than they would be in the clinical setting and represents an acceptable limitation on the options available to prospective research participants. Taken together, these considerations suggest confidential data monitoring, subject to adequate safeguards, is ethically acceptable.


Asunto(s)
Confidencialidad/ética , Revelación/ética , Consentimiento Informado/ética , Ensayos Clínicos Controlados Aleatorios como Asunto/ética , Decepción , Humanos , Autonomía Personal , Sujetos de Investigación , Estados Unidos
10.
J Med Ethics ; 33(8): 481-6, 2007 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17664310

RESUMEN

Dual-track assessment directs research ethics committees (RECs) to assess the risks of research interventions based on the unclear distinction between therapeutic and non-therapeutic interventions. The net risks test, in contrast, relies on the clinically familiar method of assessing the risks and benefits of interventions in comparison to the available alternatives and also focuses attention of the RECs on the central challenge of protecting research participants.


Asunto(s)
Investigación Biomédica/ética , Ensayos Clínicos como Asunto/ética , Comités de Ética en Investigación , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/ética , Sujetos de Investigación , Ensayos Clínicos como Asunto/efectos adversos , Ética en Investigación , Humanos , Medición de Riesgo
11.
J Med Ethics ; 33(1): 43-4, 2007 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17209110

RESUMEN

Participants are often not informed by investigators who conduct randomised, placebo-controlled acupuncture trials that they may receive a sham acupuncture intervention. Instead, they are told that one or more forms of acupuncture are being compared in the study. This deceptive disclosure practice lacks a compelling methodological rationale and violates the ethical requirement to obtain informed consent. Participants in placebo-controlled acupuncture trials should be provided an accurate disclosure regarding the use of sham acupuncture, consistent with the practice of placebo-controlled drug trials.


Asunto(s)
Terapia por Acupuntura/ética , Ética en Investigación , Consentimiento Informado/ética , Ensayos Clínicos como Asunto , Revelación/ética , Ética Médica , Humanos
12.
J Med Ethics ; 32(12): 729-33, 2006 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17145915

RESUMEN

Ethical guidelines for conducting clinical trials have historically been based on a perceived therapeutic obligation to treat and benefit the patient-participants. The origins of this ethical framework can be traced to the Hippocratic oath originally written to guide doctors in caring for their patients, where the overriding moral obligation of doctors is strictly to do what is best for the individual patient, irrespective of other social considerations. In contrast, although medicine focuses on the health of the person, public health is concerned with the health of the entire population, and thus, public health ethics is founded on the societal responsibility to protect and promote the health of the population as a whole. From a public health perspective, research ethics should be guided by giving due consideration to the risks and benefits to society in addition to the individual research participants. On the basis of a duty to protect the population as a whole, a fiduciary obligation to realise the social value of the research and the moral responsibility to distribute the benefits and burdens of research fairly across society, how a public health perspective on research ethics results in fundamental re-assessments of the proper course of action for two salient topical issues in research ethics is shown: stopping trials early for reasons of efficacy and the conduct of research on less expensive yet less effective interventions.


Asunto(s)
Códigos de Ética , Ética en Investigación , Salud Pública/ética , Discusiones Bioéticas , Humanos , Obligaciones Morales
13.
Haemophilia ; 9(2): 145-52, 2003 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12614364

RESUMEN

Haemophilia was recognized early on as an ideal candidate for a gene transfer approach to therapy. In the past decade, gene transfer experimentation in the haemophilias has indeed played an integral role in furthering the science in the global field of gene therapy. However, these expectations have placed haemophilia gene transfer researchers under pressure to succeed in a scientific domain in which successes are infrequent and progress is necessarily slow. These same expectations have also fueled the perception of gene therapy as the inevitable therapeutic goal for the youngest children with haemophilia. In this paper, we will discuss the ethical implications of this perception in light of anticipated benefits, acceptable risk, perceived consumer need and the unknown cost of this intervention. A framework for the future study and therapeutic implementation of gene transfer technology in this specific population is proposed. Public debate on this issue that includes the voices of the intended beneficiaries, especially the parents of the youngest children with haemophilia and the children themselves, is encouraged.


Asunto(s)
Ética Clínica , Terapia Genética/ética , Hemofilia A/terapia , Hemofilia B/terapia , Técnicas de Transferencia de Gen , Humanos , Masculino , Medición de Riesgo
14.
J Med Philos ; 26(6): 581-99, 2001 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11735051

RESUMEN

A basic question of medical ethics is whether the norms governing medical practice should be understood as the application of principles and rules of 'the common morality' to medicine or whether some of these norms are 'internal' or 'proper' to medicine. In this article we describe and defend an evolutionary perspective on 'the internal morality of medicine' that is defined in terms of the goals of clinical medicine and a set of duties that constrain medical practice in pursuit of these goals. This perspective is developed by means of a critical examination of the 'essentialist' conception of the internal morality of medicine advocated by Edmund Pellegrino and the critique of internal morality approaches by Robert Veatch and Tom Beauchamp.


Asunto(s)
Ética Clínica , Ética Médica , Principios Morales , Bioética , Competencia Clínica , Conocimientos, Actitudes y Práctica en Salud , Humanos , Responsabilidad Social , Valores Sociales
15.
Biol Psychiatry ; 50(10): 802-8, 2001 Nov 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11720699

RESUMEN

Psychiatric research has received intense ethical scrutiny during the past decade. Changes in how studies are designed, reviewed by ethics boards, conducted, and reported in the literature have created a need for a systematic approach to teaching psychiatric research ethics to clinical researchers in training. The purpose of this article is to describe a model curriculum and comprehensive background reading list for training in psychiatric research bioethics. The curriculum was designed as an interactive seminar in a research fellowship program but can be adapted and incorporated into existing medical school and psychiatry residency training curricula. Participants in the seminar provide formal and informal evaluations of each session and the seminar as a whole. The seminar, now in it's third year, has been regularly attended and highly regarded by the NIMH research fellows who have participated. In response to recommendations by the participants, the content and organization of the seminar has been modified. Clinical research is both scientifically and ethically complex. Our initial experience with a formal curriculum in psychiatric research bioethics suggests that this educational activity has been both meaningful and relevant for psychiatrists training to be clinical investigators.


Asunto(s)
Educación de Postgrado en Medicina , Ética Médica , Ética , Becas , Psiquiatría/educación , Curriculum , Educación , Humanos , Apoyo a la Investigación como Asunto , Estados Unidos
16.
N Engl J Med ; 345(17): 1277; author reply 1278-9, 2001 Oct 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11680454
19.
Clin Infect Dis ; 33(7): 1028-33, 2001 Oct 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11528576

RESUMEN

Challenge experiments that induce infections in healthy volunteers are an important method for initial efficacy testing of candidate vaccines and for study of the pathogenesis of infectious diseases. Although these studies can be conducted safely for selected infectious diseases that are either fully treatable or self-limiting, they raise significant ethical issues. An ethical framework is offered for evaluating infection-inducing challenge experiments, which focuses on the scientific and public health rationale for conducting these studies, the risks that they pose and the ways in which these risks can be minimized, the symptoms experienced by healthy volunteers that may cause discomfort or distress, the exclusion of vulnerable research subjects, the informed consent process, the payment of volunteers, and the use of isolation of volunteers to prevent infection of others.


Asunto(s)
Discusiones Bioéticas , Ensayos Clínicos como Asunto/normas , Control de Enfermedades Transmisibles , Infecciones , Vacunas , Experimentación Humana/ética , Humanos , Consentimiento Informado
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