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Ethics in clinical research

In the United States it was as a direct result of the revelation of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study that the next U.S. medical ethics initiative emerged. The National Research Act of 1974 was passed (Public Law 93348), which required regulatory protection for human subjects and created the National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research. In 1979 this commission produced the Belmont Report, named after the Smithsonian Institution s Conference Center, where the discussions were first held in 1976. The report established three ethical principles to allow problems to be solved in the area of ethics in clinical research (1) respect for persons, (2) beneficence, and (3) justice. In general terms, these categories were equivalent to informed consent, risk-benefit assessment, and an appropriate choice of subjects for the research. [Pg.360]

Beecher, H.K., Ethics in Clinical Research , New England Journal of Medicine, 274 (i966a),pp. 1354-60. [Pg.584]


See other pages where Ethics in clinical research is mentioned: [Pg.746]    [Pg.529]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.148 , Pg.149 , Pg.150 , Pg.151 , Pg.152 ]




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