Literature DB >> 29926769

Review of Scientific Self-Experimentation: Ethics History, Regulation, Scenarios, and Views Among Ethics Committees and Prominent Scientists.

Brian P Hanley1, William Bains2, George Church3.   

Abstract

We examine self-experimentation ethics history and practice, related law, use scenarios in universities and industry, and attitudes. We show through analysis of the historical development of medical ethics and regulation, from Hippocrates through Good Clinical Practice that there are no ethical barriers to self-experimentation. When the self-experimenter is a true investigator, there is no other party to be protected from unethical behavior. We discuss the n-of-1 issue in self-experiments, and make suggestions for improving experiment design. We discuss real-world scenarios of self-experimentation: at universities, for independent single-subject investigators, investigator/employees at pharmaceutical firms, and nonscientist self-experimenters. Our survey of ethics committees regarding policy and review for self-experimenting investigators show that approximately one-third of ethics committee respondents had a policy regarding self-experimentation, and one-third did not require ethical committee review of proposed experiments. There was no relationship between having a policy and asking for review. We also surveyed member attitudes to, and experiences of, self-experimentation among members of the National Academy of Sciences, Royal Society, and European Academy of Sciences. To our knowledge, this survey is the first breakdown of self-experiments into impact-relevant type classifications, and represents an advance in the field. Half of our scientist respondents performed self-experiments, and roughly one-fifth had conducted serious self-experiments. Most responders thought self-experiments were valuable, however, biologics injections, radiation exposure, and surgical implants had negative ratings greater than positive. We conclude that self-experimenters should not have attempts made to terminate them, bar them from use of facilities, nor be barred from using themselves or their tissues except in exceptional circumstances. Organizational uncertainty over the ethical and regulatory status of self-experimentation, and resulting fear of consequences is unjustified and may be blocking a route to human experiments that practicing scientists widely consider appropriate, and which historical precedent has shown is valuable.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ethics, research history, human research, medical ethics; self-experimentation, n-of-1

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29926769     DOI: 10.1089/rej.2018.2059

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rejuvenation Res        ISSN: 1549-1684            Impact factor:   4.663


  3 in total

1.  Designing a SARS-CoV-2 T-Cell-Inducing Vaccine for High-Risk Patient Groups.

Authors:  Hans-Georg Rammensee; Cécile Gouttefangeas; Sonja Heidu; Reinhild Klein; Beate Preuß; Juliane Sarah Walz; Annika Nelde; Sebastian P Haen; Michael Reth; Jianying Yang; Ghazaleh Tabatabai; Hans Bösmüller; Helen Hoffmann; Michael Schindler; Oliver Planz; Karl-Heinz Wiesmüller; Markus W Löffler
Journal:  Vaccines (Basel)       Date:  2021-04-24

2.  A new synthetic toll-like receptor 1/2 ligand is an efficient adjuvant for peptide vaccination in a human volunteer.

Authors:  Hans-Georg Rammensee; Karl-Heinz Wiesmüller; P Anoop Chandran; Henning Zelba; Elisa Rusch; Cécile Gouttefangeas; Daniel J Kowalewski; Moreno Di Marco; Sebastian P Haen; Juliane S Walz; Yamel Cardona Gloria; Johanna Bödder; Jill-Marie Schertel; Antje Tunger; Luise Müller; Maximilian Kießler; Rebekka Wehner; Marc Schmitz; Meike Jakobi; Nicole Schneiderhan-Marra; Reinhild Klein; Karoline Laske; Kerstin Artzner; Linus Backert; Heiko Schuster; Johannes Schwenck; Alexander N R Weber; Bernd J Pichler; Manfred Kneilling; Christian la Fougère; Stephan Forchhammer; Gisela Metzler; Jürgen Bauer; Benjamin Weide; Wilfried Schippert; Stefan Stevanović; Markus W Löffler
Journal:  J Immunother Cancer       Date:  2019-11-15       Impact factor: 13.751

3.  Ethical Inclusion of Health Care Workers in Covid-19 Research.

Authors:  Holly Fernandez Lynch; Dawn Lundin; Emma A Meagher
Journal:  Ethics Hum Res       Date:  2021-02-09
  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.