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  1. Very few researchers have reported on procedures of recruiting, obtaining informed consent, and compensating participants in health research in the Arabian Gulf Region. Empirical research can inform the debate...

    Authors: Amal Killawi, Amal Khidir, Maha Elnashar, Huda Abdelrahim, Maya Hammoud, Heather Elliott, Michelle Thurston, Humna Asad, Abdul Latif Al-Khal and Michael D Fetters
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2014 15:9
  2. Since Japan adopted the concept of informed consent from the West, its inappropriate acquisition from patients in the Japanese clinical setting has continued, due in part to cultural aspects. Here, we discuss ...

    Authors: Sakiko Masaki, Hiroko Ishimoto and Atsushi Asai
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2014 15:8
  3. The increased use of human biological material for cell-based research and clinical interventions poses risks to the privacy of patients and donors, including the possibility of re-identification of individual...

    Authors: Ubaka Ogbogu, Sarah Burningham, Adam Ollenberger, Kathryn Calder, Li Du, Khaled El Emam, Robyn Hyde-Lay, Rosario Isasi, Yann Joly, Ian Kerr, Bradley Malin, Michael McDonald, Steven Penney, Gayle Piat, Denis-Claude Roy, Jeremy Sugarman…
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2014 15:7
  4. The Editors of BMC Medical Ethics would like to thank all our reviewers who have contributed to the journal in Volume 13 (2013).

    Authors: Fernando Marques
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2014 15:6
  5. The preventative paradigm of preconception care is receiving increasing attention, yet its boundaries remain vague in three respects: temporally; agentially; and instrumentally. Crucially, it remains unclear j...

    Authors: Pieter Bonte, Guido Pennings and Sigrid Sterckx
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2014 15:5
  6. The use of biological samples in research raises a number of ethical issues in relation to consent, storage, export, benefit sharing and re-use of samples. Participant perspectives have been explored in North ...

    Authors: Keymanthri Moodley, Nomathemba Sibanda, Kelsey February and Theresa Rossouw
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2014 15:4
  7. The current doctrine of informed consent for clinical care has been developed in cultures characterized by low-context communication and monitoring-style coping. There are scarce empirical data on patients’ no...

    Authors: Muhammad M Hammami, Yussuf Al-Jawarneh, Muhammad B Hammami and Mohammad Al Qadire
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2014 15:3
  8. Although informed consent is an integral part of clinical practice, its current doctrine remains mostly a matter of law and mainstream ethics rather than empirical research. There are scarce empirical data on ...

    Authors: Muhammad M Hammami, Eman A Al-Gaai, Yussuf Al-Jawarneh, Hala Amer, Muhammad B Hammami, Abdullah Eissa and Mohammad Al Qadire
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2014 15:2
  9. The growing prevalence of health care ethics consultation (HCEC) services in the U.S. has been accompanied by an increase in calls for accountability and quality assurance, and for the debates surrounding why ...

    Authors: Yen-Yuan Chen, Tzong-Shinn Chu, Yu-Hui Kao, Pi-Ru Tsai, Tien-Shang Huang and Wen-Je Ko
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2014 15:1
  10. Recently, individualized or personalized medicine (PM) has become a buzz word in the academic as well as public debate surrounding health care. However, PM lacks a clear definition and is open to interpretatio...

    Authors: Sebastian Schleidgen, Corinna Klingler, Teresa Bertram, Wolf H Rogowski and Georg Marckmann
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:55
  11. Information and communication technologies are becoming an integral part of medical practice, research and administration and their use will grow as telemedicine and electronic medical record use become part o...

    Authors: Caron Jack, Yashik Singh and Maurice Mars
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14(Suppl 1):S8

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 14 Supplement 1

  12. Every year, research specimens are shipped from one institution to another as well as across national boundaries. A significant proportion of specimens move from poor to rich countries. Concerns are always rai...

    Authors: Takafira Mduluza, Nicholas Midzi, Donold Duruza and Paul Ndebele
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14(Suppl 1):S7

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 14 Supplement 1

  13. The issue of stigma is very important in the battle against HIV/AIDS in Africa since it may affect patient attendance at healthcare centres for obtaining antiretroviral (ARV) medications and regular medical ch...

    Authors: Temitayo O Famoroti, Lucy Fernandes and Sylvester C Chima
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14(Suppl 1):S6

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 14 Supplement 1

  14. Doctor and healthcare worker (HCW) strikes are a global phenomenon with the potential to negatively impact on the quality of healthcare services and the doctor-patient relationship. Strikes are a legitimate de...

    Authors: Sylvester C Chima
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14(Suppl 1):S5

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 14 Supplement 1

  15. Controversies still exists within the research fraternity on the form and level of incentives, compensation and reimbursement to study participants in resource-constrained settings. While most research activit...

    Authors: Takafira Mduluza, Nicholas Midzi, Donold Duruza and Paul Ndebele
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14(Suppl 1):S4

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 14 Supplement 1

  16. Informed consent is a legal and ethical doctrine derived from the principle of respect for autonomy. Generally two rights derived from autonomy are accorded legal protection. The constitutional right to bodily...

    Authors: Sylvester C Chima
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14(Suppl 1):S3

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 14 Supplement 1

  17. This paper addresses the past, present and future aspects of African leadership and organizational ethics that have, are and will be key for any organization to sustain its systems and structures. Organization...

    Authors: Jude Mutuku Mathooko
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14(Suppl 1):S2

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 14 Supplement 1

  18. The 3rd Pan-African Ethics Human Rights and Medical Law (3rd EHRML) conference was held in Johannesburg on July 7, 2013, as part of the Africa Health Congress. The conference brought together bioethicists, resear...

    Authors: Sylvester C Chima, Takafira Mduluza and Julius Kipkemboi
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14(Suppl 1):S1

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 14 Supplement 1

  19. In clinical research scientific, legal as well as ethical aspects are important. It is well known that clinical investigators at university hospitals have to undertake their PhD-studies alongside their daily w...

    Authors: Arja Halkoaho, Mari Matveinen, Ville Leinonen, Kirsi Luoto and Tapani Keränen
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:53
  20. Little is known about the views of mothers when their children are invited to participate in randomized clinical trials (RCTs) investigating medicines and/or invasive procedures. Our goal was to understand mot...

    Authors: Adriana Assis Carvalho and Luciane Rezende Costa
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:52
  21. Psychiatric staff members have the power to decide the options that frame encounters with patients. Intentional as well as unintentional framing can have a crucial impact on patients’ opportunities to be heard...

    Authors: Veikko Pelto-Piri, Karin Engström and Ingemar Engström
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:49
  22. In studies publishing identifying personal information, obtaining consent is regarded as necessary, as it is impossible to ensure complete anonymity. However, current journal practices around specific points t...

    Authors: Akiko Yoshida, Yuri Dowa, Hiromi Murakami and Shinji Kosugi
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:47
  23. The 2006 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) revised recommendations for HIV testing in clinical settings contained seven specific changes to how health care facilities should provide HIV testing....

    Authors: Michael J Waxman, Roland C Merchant, M Teresa Celada and Melissa A Clark
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:46
  24. In 2008 UK legislation was amended to enable the use of deferred consent for paediatric emergency care (EC) trials in recognition of the practical and ethical difficulties of obtaining prospective consent in a...

    Authors: Kerry Woolfall, Lucy Frith, Carrol Gamble and Bridget Young
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:45
  25. With a view to addressing the moral concerns about the use of donor siblings, the Policy Statement of the American Academy of Pediatrics - Children as Hematopoietic Stem Cell Donors (the Policy) has laid out t...

    Authors: Tak Kwong Chan and George Lim Tipoe
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:43
  26. Defensive medicine is defined as a doctor’s deviation from standard practice to reduce or prevent complaints or criticism. The objectives of this study were to assess the prevalence of the practice of defensiv...

    Authors: Osman Ortashi, Jaspal Virdee, Rudaina Hassan, Tomasz Mutrynowski and Fikri Abu-Zidan
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:42
  27. International health research in malaria-endemic settings may include screening for sickle cell disease, given the relationship between this important genetic condition and resistance to malaria, generating qu...

    Authors: Vicki Marsh, Francis Kombe, Raymond Fitzpatrick, Thomas N Williams, Michael Parker and Sassy Molyneux
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:41
  28. Although there is extensive information about why people participate in clinical trials, studies are largely based on quantitative evidence and typically focus on single conditions. Over the last decade invest...

    Authors: Anne Townsend and Susan M Cox
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:40
  29. In their book Spare Parts, published in 1992, Fox and Swazey criticized various aspects of organ transplantation, including the routinization of the procedure, ignorance regarding its inherent uncertainties, and ...

    Authors: Céline Durand, Andrée Duplantie, Yves Chabot, Hubert Doucet and Marie-Chantal Fortin
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:39
  30. Medical tourism—the practice where patients travel internationally to privately access medical care—may limit patients’ regular physicians’ abilities to contribute to the informed decision-making process. We a...

    Authors: Jeremy Snyder, Valorie A Crooks, Rory Johnston and Shafik Dharamsi
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:37
  31. Biological sample and data transfer within and out of Africa is steeped in controversy With the H3Africa project now aiming to establish biobanks in Africa, it is essential that there are ethical and legal gov...

    Authors: Ciara Staunton and Keymanthri Moodley
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:35
  32. Recruiting minorities into research studies requires special attention, particularly when studies involve “extra-vulnerable” participants with multiple vulnerabilities, e.g., pregnant women, the fetuses/neonat...

    Authors: Pornpimon Adams, Waranya Wongwit, Krisana Pengsaa, Srisin Khusmith, Wijitr Fungladda, Warissara Chaiyaphan, Chanthima Limphattharacharoen, Sukanya Prakobtham and Jaranit Kaewkungwal
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:33
  33. A survey on the knowledge and attitudes towards the Austrian organ donation legislation (an opt-out solution) of selected groups of the Austrian population taking into account factors such as age, gender, leve...

    Authors: Vanessa Stadlbauer, Peter Steiner, Martin Schweiger, Michael Sereinigg, Karl-Heinz Tscheliessnigg, Wolfgang Freidl and Philipp Stiegler
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:32
  34. The increase in the volume of research conducted in Low and Middle Income Countries (LMIC), has brought a renewed international focus on processes for ethical conduct of research. Several programs have been in...

    Authors: Adnan A Hyder, Waleed Zafar, Joseph Ali, Robert Ssekubugu, Paul Ndebele and Nancy Kass
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:31
  35. Efforts to improve patients’ understanding of their own medical treatments or research in which they are involved are progressing, especially with regard to informed consent procedures. We aimed to design a mu...

    Authors: Silvia Cervo, Jane Rovina, Renato Talamini, Tiziana Perin, Vincenzo Canzonieri, Paolo De Paoli and Agostino Steffan
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:30
  36. In resource-limited settings where healthcare services are limited and poverty is common, it is difficult to ethically conduct clinical research without providing patient-care. Therefore, integration of patien...

    Authors: Moses Laman, William Pomat, Peter Siba and Inoni Betuela
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:29
  37. Obtaining informed consent is a cornerstone of biomedical research, yet participants comprehension of presented information is often low. The most effective interventions to improve understanding rates have no...

    Authors: Adam Nishimura, Jantey Carey, Patricia J Erwin, Jon C Tilburt, M Hassan Murad and Jennifer B McCormick
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:28
  38. Photographs are commonly taken of children in medical and research contexts. With the increased availability of photographs through the internet, it is increasingly important to consider their potential for ne...

    Authors: Delan Devakumar, Helen Brotherton, Jay Halbert, Andrew Clarke, Audrey Prost and Jennifer Hall
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:27
  39. In recent decades, the general public has become increasingly receptive toward a legislation that allows active voluntary euthanasia (AVE). The purpose of this study was to survey the current attitude towards ...

    Authors: Willibald J Stronegger, Nathalie T Burkert, Franziska Grossschädl and Wolfgang Freidl
    Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2013 14:26

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