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This article explores key ethical issues in human and animal research, such as individual autonomy, informed consent, and vulnerable populations, along with the conceptual differences in therapy, research, and the justification of using human subjects.
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Issues? • Individual autonomy • Informed consent • Incompetent patients • Proxy consent • Best-interest standard • Vulnerable populations • Ethical treatment of animals
Conceptual Issues • In Human Research • Therapy: • Refers to a set of activities whose primary purpose is to relieve suffering, restore or maintain health, or prolong life
Examples of Therapy • Medical treatment • Diagnosis of preventive measures • Vaccine injections
Primary aim of therapy • To benefit the patient
Research • Refers to a set of scientific activities whose primary purpose in to gain knowledge • Humans / animals service as subjects
Therapeutic Research • Research that also benefits (hopefully) the patient
Non-Therapeutic Research • Research whose sole aim is to contribute to generalizable knowledge of issue • The patient does not benefit
1. Utilitarianism • Most commonly offered justification for human research is utilitarian
1. Human experimentation enhances the discovery of new diagnostic and therapeutic techniques that benefit most people
2. Controlled experiments are necessary for sound medical practice • Controlled research experiments can rule out ineffective or harmful practices
2. Fairness or Gratitude • 1. we all benefit from past research • 2. without human subjects this research would not be beneficial • 3. therefore we have an obligation to participate in future research
How do we reconcile • The rights of the individual with furthering medical research?
The Protection Model • There must be adequate protection for participants in research
The Access Model • In the absence of effective treatment • All groups should have access • equal access to research • AIDS • Woman • Minorities
Informed Consent • Based upon deontological perspective • Respect for autonomy and value of individual • Self determination
Important Considerations • 1. The Naturally Vulnerable • Elderly • Children • Psychiatric patients
2. Egregious historical failures of researches to comply with informed consent • Nazi researchers • Tuskegee
3. Complexities in implementing informed consent • Psychiatric patients • Minorities • Religious aspects
Proxy Consent • Informed consent given on behalf of those who are incapable of giving consent • Children • Mentally ill • Dementia • Elderly
Question? • When is it morally permissible for incompetent patients to participate in non-therapeutic research?
Minimal Risk? • One view is that • Incompetent patients should only be allowed to participate in research • Where there is minimal risk to the patient
Class Specific Illnesses • Some illness can only be studied with particular groups • Infantile Autism • Pediatric illnesses • Alzheimer’s
The only way to develop cures for these diseases is to have research on these groups • Most researchers argue that the potential gains outweigh the potential harms • Therefore, Proxy consent is justified
Placebo • An inactive substance (often a sugar pill) given to a patient in place of medication. • Clinical trials show that between 30% to 40% of people will show improvement when given a placebo because they believe it will work.
In drug trials, a control group is given a placebo while another group is given the drug being studied. • That way, researchers can compare the drug's effectiveness against the placebo's effectiveness.
A study in which people are allocated at random (by chance alone) to receive one of several clinical interventions. • One of these interventions is the standard of comparison or control. • The control may be a standard practice, a placebo ("sugar pill"), or no intervention at all.
Double-Blind Trial • In a double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial, neither the patients nor the researchers know who is getting a placebo and who is getting the treatment. • Administrator knows
Because patients don't know what they're getting, their belief about what will happen doesn't taint the results.
Because the researchers don't know either, they can't hint to patients about what they're getting, • and they also won't taint results through their own biased expectations about what the results will be.
Because the outcomes are measured, • RCTs are quantitative studies. • The RCT is one of the simplest and most powerful tools in clinical research.
Moral Dilemmas • What happens when researchers begin to have evidence that a certain therapy is working, but the trial in not complete? • If they tell the patient, they will destroy the trial • To not tell hurts the patient
Moral Dilemmas • What about a clinical trial where a patient knows he / she may not get any drug at all, but a placebo? • And they might die if they are not treated?
Developing Countries • Sometimes trials are done in developing nations yet the drugs in question are too expensive to give to the population of that country • What is the ethical justification for this?
Animal Research • Is it moral to use animals in research? • Do animals have moral rights? • What characteristics are needed to have moral rights
If animals can be used in research, how important does the knowledge need to be for using them?
Ethical Principles • 1. Minimizing animal’s pain, distress, discomfort • 2. Alternatives used when possible
Speciesism • Peter Singer: • The view that your species is superior to all others • Similar to racism, sexism, etc.