The participation of individuals who lack decision-making capacity is essential for advancing genomics research and neuroscience, but raises ethical and legal challenges relating to vulnerability, consent, and exclusion. Capacity differences between populations and individuals, the dynamics of capacity over time, and evolving legal consent and capacity regimes all raise uncertainty for researchers, institutional review boards, and policy makers. We review international ethical and legal best practices for including children and decisionally vulnerable adults in health research. Research ethics norms and literature tend to split such groups into narrow silos, which results in inconsistency and conceptual confusion, or to lump them together, ...
Background and purpose Adults lacking capacity are under-represented in research; therefore, the evi...
Objectives We aimed to: (A) describe researcher decision-making when including or excluding adults w...
Two separate regulatory regimes govern research with adults who lack capacity to consent in England ...
As pediatric biobank research grows, additional guidance will be needed about whether researchers sh...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)Children's and adolescents' capacity to pro...
Informed consent is an essential requirement prior to clinical trial participation, however some ‘vu...
Enhanced knowledge of the nature and causes of mental disorder have led increasingly to a need for t...
Subjects who lack capacity to give consent are common in dementia research, emergency research, and ...
BACKGROUND: Informed consent is considered a fundamental requirement for participation in trials, ye...
Background Around two million adults in the UK have significantly impaired decision-making capaci...
Contemporary societies pose major challenges for adolescents and it is essential to conduct research...
Empirical studies of ethical issues, which have increased in number and scope in recent years, may t...
Consent is generally required for research and sharing rich individual-level data but presents addit...
While adults are assumed to have the capacity to consent to medical research, and young children to ...
OBJECTIVE: Biobanks for research and genetic research are important opportunities to create new unde...
Background and purpose Adults lacking capacity are under-represented in research; therefore, the evi...
Objectives We aimed to: (A) describe researcher decision-making when including or excluding adults w...
Two separate regulatory regimes govern research with adults who lack capacity to consent in England ...
As pediatric biobank research grows, additional guidance will be needed about whether researchers sh...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)Children's and adolescents' capacity to pro...
Informed consent is an essential requirement prior to clinical trial participation, however some ‘vu...
Enhanced knowledge of the nature and causes of mental disorder have led increasingly to a need for t...
Subjects who lack capacity to give consent are common in dementia research, emergency research, and ...
BACKGROUND: Informed consent is considered a fundamental requirement for participation in trials, ye...
Background Around two million adults in the UK have significantly impaired decision-making capaci...
Contemporary societies pose major challenges for adolescents and it is essential to conduct research...
Empirical studies of ethical issues, which have increased in number and scope in recent years, may t...
Consent is generally required for research and sharing rich individual-level data but presents addit...
While adults are assumed to have the capacity to consent to medical research, and young children to ...
OBJECTIVE: Biobanks for research and genetic research are important opportunities to create new unde...
Background and purpose Adults lacking capacity are under-represented in research; therefore, the evi...
Objectives We aimed to: (A) describe researcher decision-making when including or excluding adults w...
Two separate regulatory regimes govern research with adults who lack capacity to consent in England ...