The National Health Service (NHS) has recently been the focus of government efforts to retain pharmaceutical research in the UK. Efforts to foster new partnerships between health care providers and industry have been framed with suggestions that clinical trials can offer patient benefit within the NHS, cutting across ethical and sociological concerns with the possible tension between doing research and offering care. This paper draws on ethnographic research to explore the sometimes awkward juxtapositions between trial protocols and everyday care, individual health and commercial profit, and thus the distribution of value produced through trials. While researchers appear to find the distinction between research and care useful, at least som...
Objectives: The nine NIHR CLAHRCs are collaborations between universities and local NHS organization...
The National Institute for Health Research BioResource is not a typical biobank. It banks biological...
Aim: To examine how patient perspectives and person-centred care values have been represented in doc...
Background Biomedical Research Centres (BRCs) are partnerships between healthcare organisations and ...
Consumer involvement is an established priority in UK health and social care service development and...
OBJECTIVES: To review UK guidelines regarding the use of financial incentives for healthcare profess...
Objectives: To review UK guidelines regarding the use of financial incentives for healthcare profes...
Barriers to recovering the excess treatment costs associated with health research from local organis...
Abstract Background Protecting human subjects from being exploited is one of the main ethical challe...
A new generation of adaptive, multi-arm clinical trials has been developed in cancer research includ...
Government policy has been complicit in the increasing role of commercial companies in research, whi...
BACKGROUND: In comparison with other study designs, randomised trials are regarded as particularly l...
The UK National Health Service (the 'NHS'), encouraged by the 2011 report Innovation Health and Weal...
In Editor’s Choice, Godlee supports and re-emphasises the positive points about National Institute f...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Journal of Cultural Economy, available onl...
Objectives: The nine NIHR CLAHRCs are collaborations between universities and local NHS organization...
The National Institute for Health Research BioResource is not a typical biobank. It banks biological...
Aim: To examine how patient perspectives and person-centred care values have been represented in doc...
Background Biomedical Research Centres (BRCs) are partnerships between healthcare organisations and ...
Consumer involvement is an established priority in UK health and social care service development and...
OBJECTIVES: To review UK guidelines regarding the use of financial incentives for healthcare profess...
Objectives: To review UK guidelines regarding the use of financial incentives for healthcare profes...
Barriers to recovering the excess treatment costs associated with health research from local organis...
Abstract Background Protecting human subjects from being exploited is one of the main ethical challe...
A new generation of adaptive, multi-arm clinical trials has been developed in cancer research includ...
Government policy has been complicit in the increasing role of commercial companies in research, whi...
BACKGROUND: In comparison with other study designs, randomised trials are regarded as particularly l...
The UK National Health Service (the 'NHS'), encouraged by the 2011 report Innovation Health and Weal...
In Editor’s Choice, Godlee supports and re-emphasises the positive points about National Institute f...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Journal of Cultural Economy, available onl...
Objectives: The nine NIHR CLAHRCs are collaborations between universities and local NHS organization...
The National Institute for Health Research BioResource is not a typical biobank. It banks biological...
Aim: To examine how patient perspectives and person-centred care values have been represented in doc...