•  635
    Introduction: Case Studies in the Ethics of Mental Health Research
    Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 200 230-35. 2012.
    This collection presents six case studies on the ethics of mental health research, written by scientific researchers and ethicists from around the world. We publish them here as a resource for teachers of research ethics and as a contribution to several ongoing ethical debates. Each consists of a description of a research study that was proposed or carried out and an in-depth analysis of the ethics of the study.
  •  727
    Controlling Ebola Trials
    American Journal of Bioethics 15 (4): 36-37. 2015.
  •  1053
    Preventing Sin: The Ethics of Vaccines Against Smoking
    Hastings Center Report 43 (3): 23-33. 2013.
    Advances in immunotherapy pave the way for vaccines that target not only infections, but also unhealthy behaviors such as smoking. A nicotine vaccine that eliminates the pleasure associated with smoking could potentially be used to prevent children from adopting this addictive and dangerous behavior. This paper offers an ethical analysis of such vaccines. We argue that it would be permissible for parents to give their child a nicotine vaccine if the following conditions are met: (1) the vaccine …Read more
  •  587
    The 50th Anniversary of the Declaration of Helsinki: Progress but Many Remaining Challenges
    Journal of the American Medical Association 310 (20): 2143-44. 2013.
    Since 1964, through 7 revisions, the World Medical Association’s Declaration of Helsinki has stood as an important statement regarding the ethical principles guiding medical research with human participants. It is consulted by ethics review committees, funders, researchers, and research participants. It has been incorporated into national legislation and is routinely invoked to ascertain the ethical appropriateness of clinical trials. There is much to praise about the revision process and the la…Read more
  •  1069
    Valuing Stillbirths
    with John Phillips
    Bioethics 29 (6): 413-423. 2014.
    Estimates of the burden of disease assess the mortality and morbidity that affect a population by producing summary measures of health such as quality-adjusted life years and disability-adjusted life years. These measures typically do not include stillbirths among the negative health outcomes they count. Priority-setting decisions that rely on these measures are therefore likely to place little value on preventing the more than three million stillbirths that occur annually worldwide. In contrast…Read more
  •  1239
    Introduction: The Fogarty International Research Ethics Education and Curriculum Development Program in Historical Context
    with Christine Grady, Gerald Keusch, and Barbara Sina
    Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics: An International Journal 8 (5): 3-16. 2013.
    In response to the increasing need for research ethics expertise in low and middle income countries (LMICs), the NIH's Fogarty International Research Ethics Education and Curriculum Development Program has provided grants for the development of training programs in international research ethics for LMIC professionals since 2000. This collection of papers draws upon the combined expertise of Fogarty grantees, trainees, and other experts to assess the state of research ethics in LMICs, and the les…Read more
  •  722
    How Should the Benefits of Bioprospecting Be Shared?
    Hastings Center Report 40 (1): 24-33. 2010.
    The search for valuable new products from among the world’s stock of natural biological resources is mostly carried out by people from wealthy countries, and mostly takes place in developing countries that lack the research capacity to profit from it. Surely, the indigenous people should receive some compensation from it. But we must build a robust defense for this intuition, rooted in the Western moral traditions that are widely accepted in wealthy countries, if we are to put it into practice a…Read more
  •  620
    Canada’s Tri-Council Policy Statement: Ethical conduct for research involving humans, first published in 1998, has recently been updated.1 The US Department of Health and Human Services has just issued an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that would substantially change the 20-year-old Common Rule governing most federally funded research involving human participants.2 A comparison of the two countries’ systems for protecting human research participants is therefore timely. This analysis situ…Read more