儿科研究的法律伦理。

IF 1.8 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW Duke Law Journal Pub Date : 2007-12-01
Doriane Lambelet Coleman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自20世纪90年代中后期以来,科学和医学研究界一直在努力增加接触健康儿童的机会,以进行涉及伤害或伤害风险的研究规程。这一举措扭转了该社区长期以来普遍将健康儿童排除在此类议定书之外的政策,理由是对他们的研究是非治疗性的,他们特别容易受到与研究有关的虐待,而且他们自己无法对参与给予知情同意。研究界的新立场得到了著名儿科生物伦理学家的支持,他们认为,除非健康的儿童被纳入有害或有风险的研究对象,否则在从现代科学和医学进步中受益的程度上,儿科人口将继续遭受相对于成人人口的痛苦。他们认为,研究界有可能自我管理一项规则,在保护健康儿童免受与研究有关的虐待和允许他们参与尖端儿科研究之间取得平衡。在这个方案中,父母的同意是研究界关于儿童保护的主张的核心。本文探讨了这种儿科研究伦理中固有的缺陷。具体来说,它挑战了伦理学的观点,即法律允许父母同意将其子女纳入有害或有风险的研究,只要相关侵犯符合法律虐待标准。更广泛地说,它对增加获得健康儿童进行有害和危险研究的机会的运动提出了挑战,理由是这样做有两个重要倒退的风险:首先,它愿意为了群体的利益而冒伤害个别儿童的风险,这威胁到法律在发展儿童作为一个在其自身权利方面值得尊重的个体的概念方面所取得的进展,这一概念把父母想象为受托人,并包括对侵犯身体完整的强有力保护。其次,它未能确保非治疗性研究的负担不会不成比例地落在社会经济地位较低和少数民族的儿童身上,这违反了反歧视原则,而这一原则才刚刚开始兑现其对所有儿童平等对待的承诺。最后,本文认为,儿童研究规则与儿童保护法和父母同意权的协调是确保儿童在研究环境中在这些方面受到保护的最佳方式,并且在社会其他方面受到同样程度的保护。
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The legal ethics of pediatric research.

Since the mid- to late 1990s, the scientific and medical research community has sought to increase its access to healthy children for research protocols that involve harm or a risk of harm. This move reverses longstanding policy within that community generally to exclude healthy children from such protocols on the grounds that the research as to them is non-therapeutic, that they are particularly vulnerable to research-related abuses, and that they are unable themselves to give informed consent to their participation. The research community's new posture has been supported by prominent pediatric bioethicists who have argued that unless healthy children are included as research subjects in harmful or risky research, the pediatric population will continue to suffer relative to the adult population in the extent to which it benefits from modern advances in science and medicine. In their view, it is possible for the research community to self-administer a rule that strikes a balance between protecting healthy children from research-related abuses and allowing their inclusion in cutting-edge pediatric research. In this scheme, parental consent is central to the research community's claims about child protection. This Article explores the flaws inherent in this ethics of pediatric research. Specifically, it challenges the view from ethics that the law permits parents to consent to their children's inclusion in harmful or risky research to the extent that related invasions would meet legal maltreatment standards. More broadly, it challenges the movement to increase access to healthy children for harmful and risky research on the ground that it risks two important regressions: First, in its willingness to risk harm to individual children in the interests of the group, it threatens the progress the law has made in its development of the concept of the child as an individual worthy of respect in his or her own right, a concept that imagines parents as fiduciaries and that includes strong protections against invasions of bodily integrity. Second, in its failure to assure that the burdens of non-therapeutic research are not placed disproportionately on children of lower socioeconomic and minority status, it violates the antidiscrimination principle, which has only begun to make good on its promise of equal treatment for all children. Ultimately, this Article argues that harmonization of the rules governing pediatric research with the law of child protection and parents' consent authority is the best way to assure that children are protected in the research setting in these respects and to the same extent they are otherwise in the society.

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期刊介绍: The first issue of what was to become the Duke Law Journal was published in March 1951 as the Duke Bar Journal. Created to provide a medium for student expression, the Duke Bar Journal consisted entirely of student-written and student-edited work until 1953, when it began publishing faculty contributions. To reflect the inclusion of faculty scholarship, the Duke Bar Journal became the Duke Law Journal in 1957. In 1969, the Journal published its inaugural Administrative Law Symposium issue, a tradition that continues today. Volume 1 of the Duke Bar Journal spanned two issues and 259 pages. In 1959, the Journal grew to four issues and 649 pages, growing again in 1970 to six issues and 1263 pages. Today, the Duke Law Journal publishes eight issues per volume. Our staff is committed to the purpose set forth in our constitution: to publish legal writing of superior quality. We seek to publish a collection of outstanding scholarship from established legal writers, up-and-coming authors, and our own student editors.
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