The 2008 revision of the Declaration of Helsinki (Declaration) includes a new paragraph dealing specifically with the standards of informed consent required for research involving identifiable human tissue samples and/or data. In cases where obtaining consent would be impossible or unduly burdensome, researchers may now proceed without it, following approval of the project by an ethics committee. This is a significant development in the Declaration, yet so far it has received little attention. We examine the implications of paragraph 25, and assess its role in the debates on proper sample handling. In particular, we question whether the use of the term “identifiable” weakens the paragraph, as its meaning depends on national context. Relying...
Reference to the Declaration of Helsinki as assurance for ethical principles for medical research in...
The Declaration of Helsinki (DoH) was adopted by the World Medical Association (WMA) in 1964, as a s...
At a time when there was great attention and intense public controversy surrounding clinical (especi...
In Switzerland, research with identifiable human tissue samples, and/or its accompanying data, must ...
The Declaration of Helsinki, adopted by the World Medical Association's General Assembly in 1964, is...
Background: The tissue biobanking of specific biological residual materials, which constitutes a use...
In Switzerland, research with identifiable human tissue samples, and/or its accompanying data, must ...
Everybody agrees that research is crucial to improve the quality of emergency care. Consent of human...
Technological advances have dramatically increased thescientific value of the hundreds of millions o...
“A stored collection of genetic samples in the form of blood or tissue that can be linked with medic...
Patient tissue samples are a valuable resource for medical research, and can therefore be used to co...
Everybody agrees that research is crucial to improve the quality of emergency care. Consent of human...
The attitudes towards the reuse for research of biological samples that were gathered in a diagnosti...
At the heart of research with human beings is the moral notion that the experimental subject is altr...
of the Human Tissue Act is to provide a legal framework regulating the storage and use of human tiss...
Reference to the Declaration of Helsinki as assurance for ethical principles for medical research in...
The Declaration of Helsinki (DoH) was adopted by the World Medical Association (WMA) in 1964, as a s...
At a time when there was great attention and intense public controversy surrounding clinical (especi...
In Switzerland, research with identifiable human tissue samples, and/or its accompanying data, must ...
The Declaration of Helsinki, adopted by the World Medical Association's General Assembly in 1964, is...
Background: The tissue biobanking of specific biological residual materials, which constitutes a use...
In Switzerland, research with identifiable human tissue samples, and/or its accompanying data, must ...
Everybody agrees that research is crucial to improve the quality of emergency care. Consent of human...
Technological advances have dramatically increased thescientific value of the hundreds of millions o...
“A stored collection of genetic samples in the form of blood or tissue that can be linked with medic...
Patient tissue samples are a valuable resource for medical research, and can therefore be used to co...
Everybody agrees that research is crucial to improve the quality of emergency care. Consent of human...
The attitudes towards the reuse for research of biological samples that were gathered in a diagnosti...
At the heart of research with human beings is the moral notion that the experimental subject is altr...
of the Human Tissue Act is to provide a legal framework regulating the storage and use of human tiss...
Reference to the Declaration of Helsinki as assurance for ethical principles for medical research in...
The Declaration of Helsinki (DoH) was adopted by the World Medical Association (WMA) in 1964, as a s...
At a time when there was great attention and intense public controversy surrounding clinical (especi...