Beyond Consent: Seeking Justice in Research

Author:   Jeffrey P. Kahn (Director, Center of Bioethics, University of Minnesota, USA) ,  Anna C. Mastroianni (University of Washington, USA) ,  Jeremy Sugarman (Assistant Professor of Medicine, Duke University, USA) ,  Jeremy Sugarman (Assistant Professor of Medicine, Duke University, USA)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780195113532


Pages:   204
Publication Date:   15 October 1998
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Beyond Consent: Seeking Justice in Research


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Overview

Patients with cancer and AIDS now clamor for access to clinical trials. Federal policies governing research that once emphasized protecting subjects from dangerous research now promote access to clinical research. Have claims about justice and access to the benefits of research eclipsed concerns about consent and protection from risks? How can we make good and fair decisions about the selection of subjects and other questions of justice in research? Beyond Consent examines the concept of justice and its application to human subject research through the different lenses of important research populations: children, the vulnerable sick, captive and convenient populations, women, people of color, and subjects in international settings. To set the stage for this examination, and introductory chapter addresses the evolution of research policies. After a look at specific subject populations, the authors discuss the concept of justice for research with human subjects in the future and analyze justice throughout the research enterprise.

Full Product Details

Author:   Jeffrey P. Kahn (Director, Center of Bioethics, University of Minnesota, USA) ,  Anna C. Mastroianni (University of Washington, USA) ,  Jeremy Sugarman (Assistant Professor of Medicine, Duke University, USA) ,  Jeremy Sugarman (Assistant Professor of Medicine, Duke University, USA)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.10cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 24.30cm
Weight:   0.521kg
ISBN:  

9780195113532


ISBN 10:   0195113535
Pages:   204
Publication Date:   15 October 1998
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

Table of Contents

1: Jeffrey Kahn, Anna Mastroianni (both at the University of Minnesota), Jeremy Sugarman (Duke University): Changing Claims About Justice in Research: An Introduction and Overview 2: Charles R. McCarthy (Georgetown University): The Evolving Story of Justice in Federal Research Policy 3: Baruch Brody (Baylor College of Medicine): Research on the Vulnerable Sick 4: Robert M. Nelson (Medical College of Wisconsin): Children as Research Subjects 5: Nancy Kass (Johns Hopkins University): Gender and Research 6: Patricia A. King (Georgetown University): Race, Justice and Research 7: Jonathan D. Moreno (University of Virginia): Convenient and Captive Populations 8: Ruth Macklin (Albert Einstein College of Medicine): Justice in International Research 9: Madison Powers (Georgetown University): Theories of Justice in the Context of Research 10: Jeffrey Kahn, Anna Mastroianni, Jeremy Sugarman: Implementing Justice in a Changing Research Environment

Reviews

This collection of essays examines the concept of justice and its application to research with human subjects, as seen through the lenses of various research populations. It is intended for an audience of students and scholars of bioethics, medicine, public health, and public policy, as well as institutional review board members, research administrators, and public policy makers involved in regulating the process of human subjects research. --Ethics, Law, and Aging Review Beyond Consent provides an excellent historical overview of specific cases that failed to protect human subjects....This well-written, in-depth analysis of issues of justice in human research should be a valuable resource to scientists and physicians responsible for the design and conduct of human-subjects-research studies, bioethicists, institutional review board members, public health officials, regulators, and policymakers. --FORUM for Applied Research and Public Policy The major strength of this book is its focus on these underlying factors and not the events themselves...The contributors to this volume do an exceptional job of helping the reader better comprehend the complexity and dynamic nature of using human beings for research in a world that tends not to provide equity elsewhere...But for the reader who is prepared to delve deeper and look beyond the sensational, this book will inform, stimulate and motivate. --Medical Humanities Review The penultimate chapter of this book merits special mention, since it offers insights into theoretical rationales for considering demands for justice in medical research. This chapter discusses the implications of the shift in the focus of justice from individual research subjects to the groups they represent.... Beyond Consent: Seeking justice in research stimulates the reader...--New England Journal of Medicine With attention in particular to the vulnerable sick, women, children, people of color, and prisoners, contributors to this edited collection explore how the rules governing participation in research imperfectly accommodate concerns about access to healthcare. The editors are very well-respected in the field of ethics and clinical research; the contributors are uniformly well selected. This volume is an original contribution to the discussion of justice in research. I believe it will compel rethinking of the field. Among collections about justice in healthcare, this book stands out for originality and for the forcefulness of the central thesis, as well as for the care with which that thesis is explored. -- Doody's Beyond Consent opens the door to profound questions about the ethics of biomedical research, development, and access in the face of the globalization of the life sciences industries. It poses the kinds of challenges to justic that will define bioethics in this century. -- Hastings Center Report ...identifies and summarizes the evolution of policies and emerging issues in research ethics...useful resource...could be used as a core text for the human subjects portion of a research ethics class...discusses a wide range of policies. --Journal of Health Politics, Policies, and Law Vol. 25, No. 5, October 2000 This book carefully examines each of these aspects of justice in research. The penultimate chapter of this book merits special mention, since it offers insights into theoretical rationales for reconsidering demands for justice in medical research. New England Journal of MedicineVolume 341, Number 22 The contributors to this volume do an exceptional job of helping the reader better comprehend the complexity and dynamic nature of using human beings for research in a world that tends not to provide equity elsewhere...this book will inform, stimulate, and motivate. -- Medical Humanities Review, Volume 13, Number 2 ...well organized, makes a clear, poignant argument, and advances the ethical discourse on research on human subjects. --Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics


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