Research and the Individual: Human StudiesLittle, Brown, 1970 - 358 sider |
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Side 69
... rules were adopted in essence by the House of Delegates of the American Medical Association in 1948 . The rules embodied the following provisions . It is essential that the subjects truly volunteer because , as with other captive groups ...
... rules were adopted in essence by the House of Delegates of the American Medical Association in 1948 . The rules embodied the following provisions . It is essential that the subjects truly volunteer because , as with other captive groups ...
Side 216
... rules " can be laid down to govern experimentation in man . In most cases these are , if they are rigid , more likely to do harm than good . There is the leeway required for the exercise of sound judgment , without which a code becomes ...
... rules " can be laid down to govern experimentation in man . In most cases these are , if they are rigid , more likely to do harm than good . There is the leeway required for the exercise of sound judgment , without which a code becomes ...
Side 272
... rules and procedures , formulated by the University Health Services , were adopted by the President and Fellows on April 1 , 1963. They will apply hereafter to all parts of the University except the Medical School . These rules are not ...
... rules and procedures , formulated by the University Health Services , were adopted by the President and Fellows on April 1 , 1963. They will apply hereafter to all parts of the University except the Medical School . These rules are not ...
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Research and the Individual | 1 |
The Subject | 33 |
The Investigator | 79 |
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accepted amendment American Medical Association animal applied approved basic blood blood transfusion circumstances clinical investigation clinical research Code committee concerning conducted consideration Court death decision Declaration of Helsinki discussion disease doctor donor effects ethical problems evidence example experiment Food and Drug harm Harvard Medical School hazards Health Service hemodialysis hepatitis hospital human experimentation human subjects individual informed consent Institutes of Health interest investigational drug involved judgment justify kidney knowledge Ladimer limited means medical ethics medical research Medical Research Council medicine ment mental mentation moral National Institutes Nuremberg Nuremberg Code observation obtained organ organ transplantation participation patient perimentation person physician placebo possible practice present principle prisoners procedure protect psychological psychologist question reason recognized relationship respiration responsibility risk rules scientific scientist situation society standards statement therapeutic therapy tion transfusion transplantation treatment trial unethical welfare World Medical Association