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Population genomics research drawing on genetic databases has
expanded rapidly, with some of this information being combined in
'biobanks'. Managing this information in an appropriate way is a
highly complex ethical issue in the health policy arena. This book
combines theoretical and empirical research to analyze the areas of
conflict and consensus in the regulatory and ethical frameworks
that have been developed to govern biobanks. Ethicists from the
Department of Ethics, Trade, Human Rights and Health Law (ETH) of
the World Health Organization, the Institute of Biomedical Ethics
of Geneva University and the Institute of Biomedical Ethics of the
University of Zurich, with the support of the Geneva International
Academic Network (GIAN), examine the conditions under which genetic
databases can be established, kept, and made use of in an ethically
acceptable way. In addition to a comprehensive review of the
scientific literature and a comparative analysis of existing
normative frameworks, they present the results of in-depth
interviews with experts around the world concerning the most
unresolved and controversial issues. The results of that study,
combined with their normative analysis, leads to recommendations
for a better international framework.
Research with human subjects has long been controversial because of
the conflicts that often arise between promoting scientific
knowledge and protecting the rights and welfare of subjects.
Twenty-five years ago the National Commission for the Protection of
Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research addressed
these conflicts. The result was the Belmont Report: Ethical
Principles and Guidance for Research Involving Human Subjects, a
report that identified foundational principles for ethical research
with human subjects: respect for persons, beneficence, and justice.
Since the publication of Belmont, these three principles have
greatly influenced discussions of research with human subjects.
While they are often regarded as the single-most influential set of
guidelines for biomedical research and practice in the United
States (and other parts of the world), not everyone agrees that
they provide adequate guidance. Belmont Revisited brings together a
stellar group of scholars in bioethics to revisit the findings of
that original report. Their responses constitute a broad overview
of the development of the Belmont Report and the extent of its
influence, especially on governmental commissions, as well as an
assessment of its virtues and shortcomings. Belmont Revisited looks
back to reexamine the creation and influence of the Belmont Report,
and also looks forward to the future of research - with a strong
call to rethink how institutions and investigators can conduct
research more ethically.
Population genomics research drawing on genetic databases has
expanded rapidly, with some of this information being combined in
'biobanks'. Managing this information in an appropriate way is a
highly complex ethical issue in the health policy arena. This book
combines theoretical and empirical research to analyze the areas of
conflict and consensus in the regulatory and ethical frameworks
that have been developed to govern biobanks. Ethicists from the
Department of Ethics, Trade, Human Rights and Health Law (ETH) of
the World Health Organization, the Institute of Biomedical Ethics
of Geneva University and the Institute of Biomedical Ethics of the
University of Zurich, with the support of the Geneva International
Academic Network (GIAN), examine the conditions under which genetic
databases can be established, kept, and made use of in an ethically
acceptable way. In addition to a comprehensive review of the
scientific literature and a comparative analysis of existing
normative frameworks, they present the results of in-depth
interviews with experts around the world concerning the most
unresolved and controversial issues. The results of that study,
combined with their normative analysis, leads to recommendations
for a better international framework.
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