Literature DB >> 12006817

Lessons from everyday lives: a moral justification for acute care research.

Andrew D McRae1, Charles Weijer.   

Abstract

Progress in emergency and critical care requires that clinical research be performed on patients who are incapable of granting consent for research participation. Analyses of the ethics of such research have left some questions incompletely answered. Why should we be permitted to expose vulnerable patients to research risks without their consent? In particular, how do we justify research interventions that have no potential benefit for participants (nontherapeutic interventions)? This article presents a moral justification for nontherapeutic interventions in emergency research. By relying on a framework for assessing research risks, and by drawing on the example of pediatric research, this justification is founded in how institutional review boards, and society in general, analyze risk. Our justification for emergency research also suggests additional protections for emergency research participants, including a stringent threshold for research risk, that still permit important research to proceed.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12006817     DOI: 10.1097/00003246-200205000-00032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Care Med        ISSN: 0090-3493            Impact factor:   7.598


  13 in total

1.  The European Union Directive and the protection of incapacitated subjects in research: an ethical analysis.

Authors:  Henry J Silverman; Christiane Druml; Francois Lemaire; Robert Nelson
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2004-06-30       Impact factor: 17.440

Review 2.  Ethics and research in critical care.

Authors:  Henry J Silverman; Francois Lemaire
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2006-08-08       Impact factor: 17.440

3.  Hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers in trauma care: scientific rationale for the US multicenter prehosptial trial.

Authors:  Ernest E Moore; Aaron M Cheng; Hunter B Moore; Tomohiko Masuno; Jeffrey L Johnson
Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 3.352

4.  Understanding preferences regarding consent for pragmatic trials in acute care.

Authors:  Neal W Dickert; David Wendler; Chandan M Devireddy; Sara F Goldkind; Yi-An Ko; Candace D Speight; Scott Yh Kim
Journal:  Clin Trials       Date:  2018-10-03       Impact factor: 2.486

5.  Waiver of consent in noninterventional, observational emergency research: the PROMMTT experience.

Authors:  Erin E Fox; Eileen M Bulger; Aisha S Dickerson; Deborah J del Junco; Patricia Klotz; Jeanette Podbielski; Nena Matijevic; Karen J Brasel; John B Holcomb; Martin A Schreiber; Bryan A Cotton; Herb A Phelan; Mitchell J Cohen; John G Myers; Louis H Alarcon; Peter Muskat; Charles E Wade; Mohammad H Rahbar
Journal:  J Trauma Acute Care Surg       Date:  2013-07       Impact factor: 3.313

6.  The USA Multicenter Prehosptial Hemoglobin-based Oxygen Carrier Resuscitation Trial: scientific rationale, study design, and results.

Authors:  Ernest E Moore; Jeffrey L Johnson; Frederick A Moore; Hunter B Moore
Journal:  Crit Care Clin       Date:  2009-04       Impact factor: 3.598

7.  Patients' perceptions of research in emergency settings: a study of survivors of sudden cardiac death.

Authors:  Neal W Dickert; Nancy E Kass
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2008-11-10       Impact factor: 4.634

8.  Patients' preferences for enrolment into critical-care trials.

Authors:  Damon C Scales; Orla M Smith; Ruxandra Pinto; Kali A Barrett; Jan O Friedrich; Neil M Lazar; Deborah J Cook; Niall D Ferguson
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2009-06-24       Impact factor: 17.440

9.  The ethical analysis of risk in intensive care unit research.

Authors:  Charles Weijer
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2004-02-13       Impact factor: 9.097

Review 10.  Clinical research without consent in adults in the emergency setting: a review of patient and public views.

Authors:  Jan Lecouturier; Helen Rodgers; Gary A Ford; Tim Rapley; Lynne Stobbart; Stephen J Louw; Madeleine J Murtagh
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2008-04-29       Impact factor: 2.652

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