Beyond Regulations: Ethics in Human Subjects ResearchNancy M. P. King, Gail Henderson, Jane Stein Across a broad range of disciplines_in medicine, social science, and the humanities_researchers, scholars, teachers, and administrators increasingly are looking for new ways to approach ethical issues in research with human subjects. Questions about how r |
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Page vii
... Standards Be the Same in Developed and Developing Countries ? 171 MARCELA ARACENA ALVAREZ COMMENTARY 2. Research in Distressed Families : How Should Societies Make Judgments about Parents and Children ? 180 NANCY M. P. KING CASE 6 ...
... Standards Be the Same in Developed and Developing Countries ? 171 MARCELA ARACENA ALVAREZ COMMENTARY 2. Research in Distressed Families : How Should Societies Make Judgments about Parents and Children ? 180 NANCY M. P. KING CASE 6 ...
Page 10
... standards of informed consent , which they viewed as in- conveniences at best , and at worst as impediments that could render some research impossible to conduct.6 Although the Belmont Report featured respect for persons as the primary ...
... standards of informed consent , which they viewed as in- conveniences at best , and at worst as impediments that could render some research impossible to conduct.6 Although the Belmont Report featured respect for persons as the primary ...
Page 12
... standards . This position both highlights the communitarian ethics of non- Western traditions and seeks to promote the conduct of human subjects research in developing countries outside the standards represented by the principle - based ...
... standards . This position both highlights the communitarian ethics of non- Western traditions and seeks to promote the conduct of human subjects research in developing countries outside the standards represented by the principle - based ...
Page 13
... standards of the sponsoring country first and then the host country has drawn both praise and criticism - praise be- cause it prevents the exploitation of host countries , criticism because it prioritizes the standards of the sponsoring ...
... standards of the sponsoring country first and then the host country has drawn both praise and criticism - praise be- cause it prevents the exploitation of host countries , criticism because it prioritizes the standards of the sponsoring ...
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Contents
V | 21 |
VI | 23 |
VII | 45 |
VIII | 47 |
IX | 49 |
X | 67 |
XI | 72 |
XII | 81 |
XXVII | 153 |
XXVIII | 159 |
XXIX | 161 |
XXX | 163 |
XXXI | 171 |
XXXII | 180 |
XXXIII | 187 |
XXXIV | 189 |
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Common terms and phrases
abortion Abuse and Neglect academic African American Alan Benjamin Anthropology approval asked authority autonomy Balán and Ramos behavior Belmont Report biomedical research CAB members child abuse clinical concerns conduct confidentiality consent forms context contract countries cultural Curaçao Curaçaoan developing disclosure discussion emergency research ethical issues ethical principles example experience Faden federal funding guidelines harm HIV vaccine HIV/AIDS hospital human subjects research Ijsselmuiden individual industry infant informed consent institution institutional review board intervention interview investigators LONGSCAN maltreatment Medicine ment Mikvé Israel-Emanuel moral munity Nestlé North Carolina Nuremberg Code participation patients Popkin potential principlist paradigm problem procedures questions regulations relationships paradigm research ethics research involving research subjects respect for persons review committee role scientists Sephardi Jews social science research sponsoring tion treatment Tuskegee Tuskegee syphilis study vaccine trials waiver women
References to this book
README FIRST for a User's Guide to Qualitative Methods Janice M. Morse,Lyn Richards Limited preview - 2002 |