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71Response to Open Peer Commentaries on “A Duty to Participate in Research: Does Social Context Matter?”American Journal of Bioethics 8 (10): 3-4. 2008.Because of the important benefits that biomedical research offers to humans, some have argued that people have a general moral obligation to participate in research. Although the defense of such a putative moral duty has raised controversy, few scholars, on either side of the debate, have attended to the social context in which research takes place and where such an obligation will be discharged. By reflecting on the social context in which a presumed duty to participate in research will obtain,…Read more
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84Ethics, Embryos, and Eggs: The Need for More than Epistemic ValuesAmerican Journal of Bioethics 8 (12): 38-40. 2008.No abstract.
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1When ethics constrains clinical research: trial design of control arms in "greater than minimal risk" pediatric trialsHuman Gene Therapy 22 (9): 1121-27. 2011.
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2Can ethical reasoning contribute to better epidemiology? A case study in research on racial health disparitiesEuropean Journal of Epidemiology 22 (4): 215-21. 2007.
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170The ethics of anonymous gamete donation: is there a right to know one's genetic origins?Hastings Center Report 44 (2): 28-35. 2014.A growing number of jurisdictions hold that gamete donors must be identifiable to the children born with their eggs or sperm, on grounds that being able to know about one's genetic origins is a fundamental moral right. But the argument for that belief has not yet been adequately made.
Inmaculada de Melo-Martin
Weill Cornell Medicine--Cornell University
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Weill Cornell Medicine--Cornell UniversityProfessor
New York, NY, United States of America
Areas of Interest
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