PMID: 16501658Feb 28, 2006Paper

Biomedical research and mining of the poor: the need for their exclusion

Science and Engineering Ethics
R R Kishore

Abstract

Almost all ethical guidelines and legislative policies concerning biomedical research involving human subjects contain provisions about relevance of research for the participating populations, informed consent, adequate care for research induced injuries and several other safeguards but the poor continue to suffer. Globalization has further aggravated poor people's vulnerability by exposing them to international markets. Since the developing countries are abode of higher population of the poor they have become the unholy mines of this human ore for researchers. In this paper I examine various dimensions of poverty and analyze the international ethical responses in the area of biomedical research involving human subjects in order to determine their adequacy to protect the poor against exploitation and misuse and conclude that in view of the poor's inherent and extreme vulnerability and the failure of ethical pronouncements to protect them from misuse and exploitation, they should be excluded from being enrolled as research subjects.

References

Sep 15, 1998·The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy·R Hoedemaekers, H ten Have
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May 18, 2000·The New England Journal of Medicine·T Bodenheimer
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Feb 28, 2009·Australia and New Zealand Health Policy·Sophia Leon de la BarraSandra Eades
Oct 1, 2000·Environmental Science & Technology

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Citations

Feb 28, 2006·Science and Engineering Ethics·Raymond E Spier
Apr 21, 2009·Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics : JERHRE·Ana S IltisJohn T Chibnall
Jul 13, 2018·Annual Review of Virology·Sebastien LemireTimothy K Lu

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