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Ethics and Regulation of Clinical Research.
871
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1986
Year
Medical EthicsBiomedical EthicHealth PolicyEthic CommitteeClinical StudiesMedical HistoryLawBioethicsHuman Subject ResearchHuman SubjectsEthical ReviewResearch EthicsPublic HealthMedicineEthical PracticeHuman StudyHuman Research Ethic
Human subject research is essential to modern medicine, and since the 1960s the United States has established a regulatory system of institutional review boards to address ethical abuses. The author draws on his extensive experience as chair of Yale’s Human Use Committee, national commission member, and editor of Clinical Research and IRB to provide expert analysis.
Research with human subjects is an essential part of modern medicine. Since the 1960s, when knowledge of research abuses surfaced and federal regulation of human subject research began, it has been a focus of ethical and regulatory controversy. Today, a regulatory system of prior review by mixed-peer bodies, called institutional review boards (IRBs), is firmly in place in every hospital, medical school, and research facility in the country. Robert Levine's Ethics and Regulation of Clinical Research is an excellent summary of the key ethical and regulatory issues that arise in running the IRB system. The author draws on his wide experience in human subject research as chair of the Human Use Committee of the Yale University School of Medicine, as consultant and member of various national commissions, as editor of Clinical Research and IRB: A Review of Human Subject Research , and as a prolific writer and speaker on the subject.