Part I of this Comment traces the development of ethical and legal guidelines for current informed consent procedures. Part II outlines the extent of parental authority in volunteering children for research, including legal exceptions to parental permission and possible limitations imposed on parental rights by the courts. Part III challenges the assumption that parents can and will always act in their child\u27s best interest. Part IV argues that institutional review boards cannot be relied upon to protect children when parents fail to do so. Finally, Part V proposes possible improvements to the problematic evaluation process of parents and institutions when making decisions on behalf of children
RESEARCHERS have been subject to rules and guidelines governing their use of human participants in r...
Appreciation for minors’ involvement in clinical trials and for children’s au-tonomy is growing, but...
markdownabstractPaediatric research ethics evolves around a central dilemma. Either one has to accep...
Part I of this Comment traces the development of ethical and legal guidelines for current informed c...
© 2014 Dr. Nikola Aileen StepanovThe primary objectives of early phase clinical studies is to test n...
Since the mid- to late 1990s, the scientific and medical research community has sought to increase i...
Because children are presumed to have insufficient cognitive ability to consent to participate in re...
The methods literature on research with children recognises the challenges of negotiating informed c...
Research with children involves more complex considerations with respect to assuring the voluntary p...
The use of stored tissue samples from children for genetic research raises specific ethical question...
Increasingly, pleas are made for extending the involvement of minors in deci...
When children are too young to make their own autonomous decisions, decisions have to be made for th...
Special considerations apply to the ethics of research with children and young people. The United Na...
To observe and report rates of, and reasons for, parents' refusal to consent to the participation of...
In the health-care setting, parental decisions to size, shape, sculpt, and mine children\u27s bodies...
RESEARCHERS have been subject to rules and guidelines governing their use of human participants in r...
Appreciation for minors’ involvement in clinical trials and for children’s au-tonomy is growing, but...
markdownabstractPaediatric research ethics evolves around a central dilemma. Either one has to accep...
Part I of this Comment traces the development of ethical and legal guidelines for current informed c...
© 2014 Dr. Nikola Aileen StepanovThe primary objectives of early phase clinical studies is to test n...
Since the mid- to late 1990s, the scientific and medical research community has sought to increase i...
Because children are presumed to have insufficient cognitive ability to consent to participate in re...
The methods literature on research with children recognises the challenges of negotiating informed c...
Research with children involves more complex considerations with respect to assuring the voluntary p...
The use of stored tissue samples from children for genetic research raises specific ethical question...
Increasingly, pleas are made for extending the involvement of minors in deci...
When children are too young to make their own autonomous decisions, decisions have to be made for th...
Special considerations apply to the ethics of research with children and young people. The United Na...
To observe and report rates of, and reasons for, parents' refusal to consent to the participation of...
In the health-care setting, parental decisions to size, shape, sculpt, and mine children\u27s bodies...
RESEARCHERS have been subject to rules and guidelines governing their use of human participants in r...
Appreciation for minors’ involvement in clinical trials and for children’s au-tonomy is growing, but...
markdownabstractPaediatric research ethics evolves around a central dilemma. Either one has to accep...