Title of article
Practicing research ethics: Private-sector physicians & pharmaceutical clinical trials
Author/Authors
Jill A. Fisher، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
11
From page
2495
To page
2505
Abstract
This paper focuses on constructions of research ethics by primary care physicians in the USA as they engage in contract research for the pharmaceutical industry. Drawing first on historical studies of physicians as investigators and then on 12 months of qualitative fieldwork in the Southwestern US, this paper analyzes the shifting, contextualized ethics that shape physiciansʹ relationships with patients/subjects and pharmaceutical companies. Just as physicians followed professional codes of ethics prior to the codification of acceptable research conduct in the 1980s, physicians today continue to develop tacit systems of research ethics. This paper argues that private-sector physicians primarily conceptualize their ethical conduct in relation to the pharmaceutical companies hiring them, not to human subjects they enroll in clinical trials. This is not to say that these physicians do not follow the formal U.S. regulation to protect human subjects, but rather that their financial relationships with the pharmaceutical industry have a greater influence on their identities as researchers and on their constructions of their ethical responsibilities.
Keywords
private sector , Physician investigators , research ethics , pharmaceutical industry , USA , clinical trials
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
603840
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