When Not to Ask: A Defense of Choice-Masking Nudges in Medical Research.

Journal of health care law & policy Pub Date : 2022-01-01
Susanna McGrew, Sarah Raskoff, Benjamin E Berkman
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Abstract

In this article, we examine the legality and ethics of a controversial but widespread practice in clinical research: choice-masking nudges. A choice-masking nudge (CMN) exists when a research team explicitly obscures a meaningful choice from participants by presenting a default decision as the standard way forward. Even though an easy-to-use opt-out mechanism is available for participants who independently express concerns with the standard default, the fact that a default has been pre-selected is not made obvious to research participants. To opt out of the nudge, a participant must overtly request non-standard treatment. We argue that use of such nudges in medical research can be justified by their individual, collective, and social benefits, provided that they respect autonomy and satisfy our four further acceptability conditions. The structure of this Article is as follows. In Part II, we describe three controversial cases of CMNs in medical research. In Part III, we provide background on nudging and explain how our proposed CMNs fit into the existing literature on nudging and libertarian paternalism. In Part IV, we explain how the reasonable person standard as employed by United States research regulations can be used to support CMNs. In Part IV, we anticipate some of the strongest objections to CMNs by explaining how CMNs are compatible with a wide range of plausible accounts of autonomy. Finally, in Part VI, we discuss four additional core considerations an acceptable CMN must meet: legitimate policy goals; benefits outweighing harms; burdens distributed fairly; and absence of ethically superior feasible alternatives. We also analyze the three existing controversies explored in Part II and show how each would benefit from the conceptual clarity offered by our analytic framework. Medical research is complicated and can be difficult for participants to understand; thoughtfully designed CMNs can play an important role in gently guiding large numbers of research participants toward decision outcomes that really are best for them and their communities.

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何时不该问:为医学研究中掩盖选择的轻推辩护。
在这篇文章中,我们研究了一个有争议但在临床研究中广泛存在的做法的合法性和伦理性:选择掩盖轻推。当研究团队通过将默认决策作为标准的前进方式来明确地模糊参与者的有意义的选择时,就存在选择屏蔽助推(CMN)。尽管对于独立表达对标准默认值的关注的参与者来说,有一个易于使用的选择退出机制,但对于研究参与者来说,默认值已经被预先选择的事实并不明显。要选择退出轻推,参与者必须公开要求非标准治疗。我们认为,在医学研究中使用这种助推可以从个人、集体和社会效益上得到证明,前提是它们尊重自主权,并满足我们进一步提出的四个可接受条件。本文的结构如下。在第二部分中,我们描述了医学研究中三个有争议的CMNs案例。在第三部分中,我们提供了推动的背景,并解释了我们提出的CMNs如何适应现有的关于推动和自由主义家长制的文献。在第四部分中,我们解释了美国研究法规所采用的合理人标准如何用于支持CMNs。在第四部分中,我们通过解释CMNs如何与广泛的似是而非的自治描述兼容,预测了对CMNs的一些最强烈的反对意见。最后,在第六部分,我们讨论了一个可接受的CMN必须满足的四个额外核心考虑因素:合法的政策目标;利大于弊;公平分配的负担;缺乏道德上优越的可行替代方案。我们还分析了第二部分中探讨的三个现有争议,并展示了每个争议如何从我们的分析框架提供的概念清晰度中受益。医学研究是复杂的,参与者很难理解;精心设计的CMNs可以在温和地引导大量研究参与者走向真正对他们和他们的社区最好的决策结果方面发挥重要作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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