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Acceptable Risk in Biomedical Research

by Simonsen, Sigmund.
Authors: SpringerLink (Online service) Series: International Library of Ethics, Law, and the New Medicine, 1567-8008 ; . 50 Physical details: XVI, 296 p. online resource. ISBN: 9400726783 Subject(s): Medicine. | Medical ethics. | Public health laws. | Medicine & Public Health. | Theory of Medicine/Bioethics. | Medical Law. | Biomedicine general.
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E-Book E-Book AUM Main Library 610.1 (Browse Shelf) Not for loan

1.      Introduction -- 2.      Method and material -- 3.      Initial conceptual clarifications -- 4.      Origins of the requirement of proportionality -- 5.      The purpose of the requirement of proportionality -- 6.       Introduction: Part II -- 7.      Which risks, burdens and potential benefits are relevant? -- 8.      How to estimate risks, burdens, and potential benefits -- 9.      The requirement of proportionality – initial clarifications -- 10.  Therapeutic research -- 11.  Nontherapeutic research -- 12.  Nontherapeutic research on “vulnerable” participants -- 13.  Non-interference with necessary clinical interventions and the no harm rule -- 14.  Especially on randomised clinical trials, including placebo controlled clinical trials -- 15.  Acceptable Risks and Burdens to Others than the Participant -- 16.  Later developments during the course of the research -- 17.  Legal effects of the requirement of proportionality -- 18.  Summary of results -- 19.  Recommendations -- 20.   Perspectives -- 21.  Appendix.-.

This book is the first major work that addresses a core question in biomedical research: the question of acceptable risk. The acceptable level of risks is regulated by the requirement of proportionality in biomedical research law, which state that the risk and burden to the participant must be in proportion to potential benefits to the participant, society or science. This investigation addresses research on healthy volunteers, children, vulnerable subjects, and includes placebo controlled clinical trials. It represents a major contribution towards clarifying the most central, but also the most controversial and complex issue in biomedical research law and bioethics. The EU Clinical Trial Directive, the Council of Europe’s Oviedo Convention (and its Additional Protocol), and national regulation in member states are covered. It is a relevant work for lawyers and ethicists, and the practical approach makes a valuable tool for researchers and members of research ethics committees supervising biomedical research.

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