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Title Exploitation and developing countries : the ethics of clinical research / edited by Jennifer S. Hawkins and Ezekiel J. Emanuel.

Imprint Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, ©2008.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe EBSCO Clinical Nursing E-Book  Electronic Book    ---  Available
Description 1 online resource (327 pages)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Introduction : Why exploitation? / Jennifer S. Hawkins and Ezekiel J. Emanuel -- Research ethics, developing countries, and exploitation : a primer / Jennifer S. Hawkins -- Case studies : the Havrix trial and the Surfaxin trial -- Exploitation in clinical research / Alan Wertheimer -- Testing our drugs on the poor abroad / Thomas Pogge -- Broadly utilitarian theories of exploitation and multinational clinical research / Richard J. Arneson -- Kantian ethics, exploitation, and multinational clinical trials / Andrew W. Siegel -- Exploitation and the enterprise of medical research / Alisa L. Carse and Margaret Olivia Little -- Exploitation and placebo controls / Jennifer S. Hawkins -- Addressing exploitation : reasonable availability versus fair benefits / Ezekiel J. Emanuel.
Summary When is clinical research in developing countries exploitation? Exploitation is a concept in ordinary moral thought that has not often been analyzed outside the Marxist tradition. Yet it is commonly used to describe interactions that seem morally suspect in some way. A case in point is clinical research sponsored by developed countries and carried out in developing countries, with participants who are poor and sick, and lack education. Such individuals seem vulnerable to abuse. But does this, by itself, make such research exploitative? Exploitation and Developing Countries is an attempt by philosophers and bioethicists to reflect on the meaning of exploitation, to ask whether and when clinical research in developing countries counts as exploitative, and to consider what can be done to minimize the possibility of exploitation in such circumstances. These reflections should interest clinical researchers, since locating the line between appropriate and inappropriate use of subjects--the line between exploitation and fair use--is the central question at the heart of research ethics. Reflection on this rich and important moral concept should also interest normative moral philosophers of a non-Marxist bent. In addition to the editors, the contributors are Richard J. Arneson, Alisa L. Carse, Margaret Olivia Little, Thomas Pogge, Andrew W. Siegel, and Alan Wertheimer.
Note Print version record.
Language English.
Subject Clinical trials -- Moral and ethical aspects -- Developing countries.
Pulmonary surfactant.
Clinical trials -- Social aspects -- Developing countries.
Clinical Trials as Topic -- ethics
Developing Countries
Hepatitis A Vaccines
Human Experimentation -- ethics
Pulmonary Surfactants
Études cliniques -- Aspect social -- Pays en voie de développement.
Surfactant pulmonaire.
MEDICAL -- Ethics.
Pulmonary surfactant
Clinical trials -- Moral and ethical aspects
Developing countries
Indexed Term JSTOR-DDA
Multi-User.
Added Author Hawkins, Jennifer Susan, 1969-
Emanuel, Ezekiel J., 1957-
Added Title Ethics of clinical research
Other Form: Print version: Exploitation and developing countries. Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, ©2008 9780691126753 (DLC) 2008928581 (OCoLC)231586885
ISBN 9781400837328 (electronic bk.)
1400837324 (electronic bk.)
1282964607
9781282964600
9786612964602
661296460X
9780691126753
0691126755
9780691126760
0691126763
Standard No. AU@ 000051362946
DEBBG BV043091480
DEBSZ 421634766
GBVCP 1003661440
NZ1 13761676
AU@ 000069853286

 
    
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