Biobanks are rich repositories of biological materials (such as DNA) and other health and demographic data, often collected over a long period, that can be used for a variety of research purposes to improve the health of individuals and populations. It is important that the value of biobanks is maximized, but at this point in time there are a number of challenges to achieving this. There is continued debate over the most appropriate mode of gaining consent from people who contribute tissue samples and data to biobanks, which will uphold high ethical standards and enable autonomous decisionmaking
As research processes change due to technological developments in how data is collected, stored and ...
Abstract This article provides a critical overview of the ethics and governance of genetic biobank r...
Among the important ethical challenges that biobanks raise, the shortcoming of the traditional accep...
Much is known about patient attitudes to ethical and legal questions in the context of biobanking, p...
Participation in biobanks tends to favor certain groups—white, middle-class, more highly-educated—of...
Participation in biobanks tends to favor certain groups—white, middle-class, more highly-educated—of...
Much is known about patient attitudes to ethical and legal questions in the context of biobanking, p...
Biobanks include biological samples and attached databases. Human biobanks occur in research, techno...
Background: The tissue biobanking of specific biological residual materials, which constitutes a use...
From a research perspective, the interest in biobanking continues to intensify. Governments and indu...
Biobanks are repositories that store human biological materials and their associated data. They are ...
Biological residual materials can be obtained from surgical activities or from pathological waste ma...
Biobanks have been recognized as a key research infrastructure and how to approach ethical questions...
Research biobanking raises numerous ethical questions.1 This article addresses the role that the con...
The problem: We are investigating if biological material with human DNA sequence data is being colle...
As research processes change due to technological developments in how data is collected, stored and ...
Abstract This article provides a critical overview of the ethics and governance of genetic biobank r...
Among the important ethical challenges that biobanks raise, the shortcoming of the traditional accep...
Much is known about patient attitudes to ethical and legal questions in the context of biobanking, p...
Participation in biobanks tends to favor certain groups—white, middle-class, more highly-educated—of...
Participation in biobanks tends to favor certain groups—white, middle-class, more highly-educated—of...
Much is known about patient attitudes to ethical and legal questions in the context of biobanking, p...
Biobanks include biological samples and attached databases. Human biobanks occur in research, techno...
Background: The tissue biobanking of specific biological residual materials, which constitutes a use...
From a research perspective, the interest in biobanking continues to intensify. Governments and indu...
Biobanks are repositories that store human biological materials and their associated data. They are ...
Biological residual materials can be obtained from surgical activities or from pathological waste ma...
Biobanks have been recognized as a key research infrastructure and how to approach ethical questions...
Research biobanking raises numerous ethical questions.1 This article addresses the role that the con...
The problem: We are investigating if biological material with human DNA sequence data is being colle...
As research processes change due to technological developments in how data is collected, stored and ...
Abstract This article provides a critical overview of the ethics and governance of genetic biobank r...
Among the important ethical challenges that biobanks raise, the shortcoming of the traditional accep...