DocumentCode :
860012
Title :
Balancing autonomy and benefit in research ethics
Author :
Fielder, John H.
Volume :
21
Issue :
2
fYear :
2002
Firstpage :
68
Lastpage :
70
Abstract :
Laws requiring motorcycle riders to wear helmets save lives and prevent nasty brain injuries. However, a substantial number of riders resent this parentalism and want to be free to decide whether to ride without a helmet and take the additional risk. After all, motorcycle riders have already chosen a more risky form of transportation. The debate is a conflict about which of two legitimate values should prevail: benefits to riders or freedom to choose. It is a debate that occurs whenever government restricts liberty in the name of social benefit. One of the places this debate takes place is in medical research. Our discussions about the ethics of research take place in the shadow of the Nazi medical atrocities in World War II. In this essay I explore the issue of clinical trials on human volunteers for whom there will be no anticipated benefit. The topic reveals how difficult it is to reconcile autonomy and protection of human volunteers.
Keywords :
brain; legislation; medicine; Nazi medical atrocities; World War II; autonomy-benefit balancing; clinical trials; human volunteers; motorcycle riders; protection; research ethics; riding without a helmet; Brain injuries; Drugs; Ethics; Government; Guidelines; Humans; Medical diagnostic imaging; Motorcycles; Protection; Road transportation; Ethics, Research; Guidelines as Topic; Helsinki Declaration; Humans; Nontherapeutic Human Experimentation; Personal Autonomy; Research Design; Research Subjects; Risk Assessment; Social Values; Therapeutic Human Experimentation;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0739-5175
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MEMB.2002.1046117
Filename :
1046117
Link To Document :
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