Getting the ethics right regarding research in the emergency setting: Lessons from the PolyHeme study

被引:7
作者
Dickert, Neal W. [1 ]
Sugarman, Jeremy
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins Univ Hosp, Osler Med Residency Program, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA
[2] Johns Hopkins Berman Inst Bioeth, Baltimore, MD USA
关键词
D O I
10.1353/ken.2007.0010
中图分类号
B82 [伦理学(道德学)];
学科分类号
摘要
Research in emergency settings (RES) has become a major public issue with urgent policy implications. Significant attention has focused recently on RES in response to the trial of PolyHeme, a synthetic blood substitute, in trauma victims in hemorrhagic shock. Unfortunately, the discussion of the PolyFleme trial in the popular and scholarly press leaves important questions unanswered. This paper articulates three important lessons from the PolyHeme trial that have significant policy implications. First, the RES regulations should be re-visited, particularly the requirement that existing treatments be unproven or unsatisfactory in order for research to be acceptable without consent. Second, further conceptual and empirical scholarship is needed to accomplish the goal of effectively involving communities. Third, a more subtle analysis is needed regarding how to balance the needs of maintaining public trust and protecting confidential trade information in the context of RES.
引用
收藏
页码:153 / 169
页数:17
相关论文
共 54 条
[1]   The research on community consultation: An annotated bibliography [J].
Baren, Jill M. ;
Biros, Michelle H. .
ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2007, 14 (04) :346-352
[2]   Struggling with the rule: The exception from informed consent in resuscitation research [J].
Biros, Michelle .
ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2007, 14 (04) :344-345
[3]  
Burton Thomas M, 2006, Wall St J (East Ed), pA12
[4]  
BURTON TM, 2006, WALL STREET J 0224, pB4
[5]  
BURTON TM, 2006, WALL STREET J 1220, pA10
[6]  
Chamberlain James M, 2007, Acad Emerg Med, V14, pe41, DOI 10.1197/j.aem.2006.11.024
[7]  
CHEEMA M, 2004, DUKE CHRONICLE 0520
[8]   Trauma trials leave ethicists uneasy [J].
Dalton, R .
NATURE, 2006, 440 (7083) :390-391
[9]  
Davis R., 2006, USA TODAY 0614
[10]   Emergency research and consent: Keeping the exception from undermining the rule [J].
Derse, AR .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BIOETHICS, 2006, 6 (03) :36-37