Literature DB >> 28661731

At Last! Aye, and There's the Rub.

Alexander M Capron1.   

Abstract

Mea culpa. In 1981 the President's Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research, of which I was the Executive Director, recommended to the President and Congress that all federal departments and agencies that conduct or support human subjects research adopt "as a common core" the HHS regulations, "while permitting additions needed by any department or agency that are not inconsistent with these core provisions." The commission believed-rightly, I still think-that having uniformity would ease administration, reduce regulatory burdens, simplify oversight, and make research more efficient. Yet our naïve expectation the task could be accomplished in 180 days meant that we failed to anticipate that if it took much longer-namely, the 10 years that passed before the Common Rule was issued-federal officials would thereafter be reluctant to change the regulations and that when they tried to do so twenty years later, with the issuance of the ANPRM in 2011, they would propose comprehensive revisions. I argue that was the wrong conclusion to draw from the difficulties in issuing the first Common Rule, and that the process of producing the new "final rule" on January 19, 2017-during which many of the proposed changes were either dumped or promulgated without being adequately vetted-reinforces the conclusion that a more incremental process, with ongoing involvement of the public through an advisory body like the President's Commission, would be a much better way to proceed.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Common Rule; President's Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems; bioethics commission; regulatory revision

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28661731     DOI: 10.1080/15265161.2017.1329479

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Bioeth        ISSN: 1526-5161            Impact factor:   11.229


  3 in total

1.  Dollars and Deadlines: Rule Reforms in Short Time Frames.

Authors:  Toby Schonfeld; Melinda Gormley; Daniel K Nelson
Journal:  Am J Bioeth       Date:  2017-07       Impact factor: 11.229

2.  The Indefinite "Stay" on Regulatory Reforms for Research With Prisoners.

Authors:  Elaine Huang; Jennifer K Wagner
Journal:  Am J Bioeth       Date:  2017-07       Impact factor: 11.229

3.  Where Did Informed Consent for Research Come From?

Authors:  Alexander Morgan Capron
Journal:  J Law Med Ethics       Date:  2018-03-27       Impact factor: 1.718

  3 in total

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