21 results on '"fair inclusion"'
Search Results
2. Fair Subject Selection in Clinical and Social Scientific Research
- Author
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MacKay, Douglas, Iltis, Ana S., book editor, and MacKay, Douglas, book editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Reviewing fair subject selection considerations for the unique case of post sequelae COVID-19 translational studies
- Author
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E.M. Smith, E.E. Anderson, R. Deer, J. Prochaska, K. Bohn, and S. Croisant
- Subjects
Post sequelae COVID-19 ,research ethics ,fair inclusion ,fair subject selection ,diversity ,representation in research ,Medicine - Abstract
Fair inclusion of research subjects is necessary to ensure that post-acute sequelae COVID-19 (PASC) research results benefit all members of society. Scientists should conduct research on a broad sample of individuals who represent clinically relevant factors influencing a disease. Without demographic diversity and sociological and environmental variability, research outputs are less likely to apply to different populations and would thus increase health disparities. The goal of this narrative literature review and ethical analysis is to apply fair selection criteria to PASC research studies. We briefly highlight the importance of fair subject selection in translational research and then identify features of PASC, as well as PASC research, that hinder fair inclusion of research participants. We will demonstrate that determining an adequate and representative sample is not simply a matter of ensuring greater diversity; rather, fairness requires a broader evaluation of risks, burdens, and benefits specific to underrepresented populations. We provide recommendations to ensure fair subject selection in PASC research and promote translation toward positive health outcomes for all individuals, including the most vulnerable.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Reviewing fair subject selection considerations for the unique case of post sequelae COVID-19 translational studies.
- Author
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Smith, E.M., Anderson, E.E., Deer, R., Prochaska, J., Bohn, K., and Croisant, S.
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,DISEASE complications ,TRANSLATIONAL research ,LITERATURE reviews ,HUMAN research subjects - Abstract
Fair inclusion of research subjects is necessary to ensure that post-acute sequelae COVID-19 (PASC) research results benefit all members of society. Scientists should conduct research on a broad sample of individuals who represent clinically relevant factors influencing a disease. Without demographic diversity and sociological and environmental variability, research outputs are less likely to apply to different populations and would thus increase health disparities. The goal of this narrative literature review and ethical analysis is to apply fair selection criteria to PASC research studies. We briefly highlight the importance of fair subject selection in translational research and then identify features of PASC, as well as PASC research, that hinder fair inclusion of research participants. We will demonstrate that determining an adequate and representative sample is not simply a matter of ensuring greater diversity; rather, fairness requires a broader evaluation of risks, burdens, and benefits specific to underrepresented populations. We provide recommendations to ensure fair subject selection in PASC research and promote translation toward positive health outcomes for all individuals, including the most vulnerable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The moral imperative to approve pregnant women’s participation in randomized clinical trials for pregnancy and newborn complications
- Author
-
Dan Kabonge Kaye
- Subjects
Clinical trials ,Pregnancy ,Fair inclusion ,Clinical research ,Moral imperative ,Doctrine of double effect ,Medical philosophy. Medical ethics ,R723-726 - Abstract
Abstract Background There is longstanding consensus on the need to include pregnant women in research. The goal of clinical research is to find highly regulated, carefully controlled, morally responsible ways to generate evidence about how to effectively and safely prevent illness or treat sick people. This manuscripts present a conceptual analysis of the ethicality of clinical trials in 3 scenarios: where the pregnant is involved in clinical trials as a participant during pregnancy for data that addresses pregnancy complications, where the pregnant woman consents to clinical trial participation for an unborn baby that has complications, to generate data on complications at this stage of life, and where the mother may consent for participation of their newborn child in clinical trials. Methods Conceptual analysis. Findings Investigators often choose to exclude pregnant women and newborns from research, even where there is possibility for them to benefit from the study intervention. Objections include vulnerability of pregnant women, altered pharmacokinetics and risk of adverse effects, with a need to balance potential maternal and fetal risks and benefits of research participation. While the objections may be valid, not performing research magnifies what should be a carefully controlled risk during research, pushing this risk into the clinical setting, and subsequently posing a challenge to clinicians who are faced with making treatment decisions for pregnant patients with limited evidence of efficacy and safety. The potential benefits of fair inclusion in clinical trials outweigh the potential risks. Conclusion Research involving pregnant women is necessary to provide women with effective treatment during pregnancy, to promote fetal safety (such as by avoiding the clinical use of drugs that may be harmful to the developing fetus), and to reduce avoidable harm from suboptimal care (such as from underdosing) and to provide pregnant women, their fetuses and newborns (with access to potential benefits of research participation).
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Four Faces of Fair Subject Selection.
- Author
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MacKay, Douglas and Saylor, Katherine Witte
- Subjects
- *
CLINICAL medicine research , *DECISION making , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *RESEARCH ethics , *GOVERNMENT policy , *AT-risk people , *HUMAN research subjects , *PATIENT selection , *PSYCHOLOGY of human research subjects - Abstract
Although the principle of fair subject selection is a widely recognized requirement of ethical clinical research, it often yields conflicting imperatives, thus raising major ethical dilemmas regarding participant selection. In this paper, we diagnose the source of this problem, arguing that the principle of fair subject selection is best understood as a bundle of four distinct sub-principles, each with normative force and each yielding distinct imperatives: (1) fair inclusion; (2) fair burden sharing; (3) fair opportunity; and (4) fair distribution of third-party risks. We first map out these distinct sub-principles, and then identify the ways in which they yield conflicting imperatives for the design of inclusion and exclusion criteria, and the recruitment of participants. We then offer guidance for how decision makers should navigate these conflicting imperatives to ensure that participants are selected fairly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Fair Inclusion of Pregnant Women in Clinical Research: A Systematic Review of Reported Reasons for Exclusion
- Author
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van der Zande, Indira S. E., van der Graaf, Rieke, Browne, Joyce L., van Delden, Johannes J. M., Hunter, David, Series editor, Weijer, Charles, Series editor, McMillan, John, Series editor, Baylis, Françoise, editor, and Ballantyne, Angela, editor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Fair inclusion of pregnant women in clinical trials: an integrated scientific and ethical approach
- Author
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Rieke van der Graaf, Indira S. E. van der Zande, Hester M. den Ruijter, Martijn A. Oudijk, Johannes J. M. van Delden, Katrien Oude Rengerink, and Rolf H. H. Groenwold
- Subjects
Research ethics ,Pregnant women ,Research methodology ,Fair inclusion ,Drug trials ,Oversampling ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Since pregnant women are severely underrepresented in clinical research, many take the position that the exclusion of pregnant women from research must be justified unless there are compelling “scientific reasons” for their exclusion. However, it is questionable whether this approach renders research with pregnant women fair. This paper analyzes and evaluates when research with pregnant women can be considered as fair and what constitutes scientific reasons for exclusion. Methods Conceptual ethical and methodological analysis and evaluation of fair inclusion. Results Fair inclusion of pregnant women means (1) that pregnant women who are eligible are not excluded solely for being pregnant and (2) that the research interests of pregnant women are prioritized, meaning that they ought to receive substantially more attention. Fairness does not imply that pregnant women should be included in virtually every research project, as including only a few pregnant women in a population consisting only of women will not help to determine the effectiveness and safety of a treatment in pregnant women. Separate trials in pregnant women may be preferable once we assume, or know, that effects of interventions in pregnant women differ from the effects in other subpopulations, or when we assume, or know, that there are no differences. In the latter case, it may be preferable to conduct post-marketing studies or establish registries. If there is no conclusive evidence indicating either differences or equivalence of effects between pregnant and non-pregnant women, yet it seems unlikely that major differences or exact equivalence exist, the inclusion of pregnant women should be sufficient. Depending on the research question, this boils down to representativeness in terms of the proportion of pregnant and non-pregnant women, or to oversampling pregnant women. Conclusions Fair inclusion of pregnant women in research implies that separate trials in pregnant women should be promoted. Inclusion of pregnant women has to be realized at the earliest phases of the research process. In addition to researchers and research ethics committees, scientific advisory councils, funders, drug regulatory agencies, pharmaceutical companies, journal editors and others have a joint responsibility to further develop the evidence base for drug use in pregnant women.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Should pregnant women be excluded from a community-based lifestyle intervention trial? A case study
- Author
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Elezebeth Mathews
- Subjects
Fair inclusion ,Lifestyle modification ,Type 2 diabetes mellitus ,Ethics ,Pregnancy research ,Clinical translational research ,Gynecology and obstetrics ,RG1-991 - Abstract
Abstract Kerala, the southernmost Indian state, is known as the diabetes capital of the country. A community-based lifestyle modification program was implemented in the rural areas of Kerala, India, to assess effectiveness in reducing the incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) among individuals at high risk. High-risk individuals for T2DM were identified through home screening and enrolled into the program after an oral glucose tolerance test to rule out T2DM. Pregnant women were excluded from participation in the trial without justification. An analysis is offered to show that exclusion in this case compromised the ethical requirements of fairness and favorable risk-benefit ratio: specifically, pregnant women were deprived of the benefits of screening for high-risk status and subsequent potential involvement in the lifestyle modification intervention, an effective preventive strategy. Exclusion of pregnant women from translational and implementation research with known benefits over risk violates several ethical principles and further limits the exploration and advancement of research for future disease prevention in the population at large. Clearer guidelines on minimal risk and benefit need to be established in order to facilitate research that is beneficial to pregnant women and the developing fetus.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The elusive ideal of inclusiveness: lessons from a worldwide survey of neurologists on the ethical issues raised by whole-genome sequencing
- Author
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Thierry Hurlimann, Iris Jaitovich Groisman, and Béatrice Godard
- Subjects
Research ethics ,Justice ,Fair inclusion ,Genomics ,Medical philosophy. Medical ethics ,R723-726 - Abstract
Abstract The anticipation of ethical issues that may arise with the clinical use of genomic technologies is crucial to envision their future implementation in a manner sensitive to local contexts. Yet, populations in low- and middle-income countries are underrepresented in studies that aim to explore stakeholders’ perspectives on the use of such technologies. Within the framework of a research project entitled “Personalized medicine in the treatment of epilepsy”, we sought to increase inclusiveness by widening the reach of our survey, inviting neurologists from around the world to share their views and practices regarding the use of whole-genome sequencing in clinical neurology and its associated ethics. We discuss herein the compelling scientific and ethical reasons that led us to attempt to recruit neurologists worldwide, despite the lack, in many low- or middle-income countries, of access to genomic technologies. Recruitment procedures and their results are presented and discussed, as well as the barriers we faced. We conclude that inclusive recruitment remains a challenging, albeit necessary and legitimate, endeavour.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Including Pregnant Women in Clinical Research: Practical Guidance for Institutional Review Boards.
- Author
-
Payne, Pamela
- Subjects
- *
PREGNANT women , *MEDICAL research , *INSTITUTIONAL review boards , *DRUG efficacy , *CLINICAL drug trials - Abstract
Scanty evidence exists about the safety and effectiveness of drugs—and of their efficacious dosing—that women may need to treat acute and chronic health issues during their pregnancies. This lack of evidence puts pregnant women and their fetuses at risk of harm from the use or avoidance of drugs during pregnancy. In light of the protectionist approach in regulations governing research with pregnant women and fetuses, trial sponsors, researchers, clinicians, and institutional review boards (IRBs) have been reluctant to include pregnant women in clinical drug trials, applying ethical reasoning for exclusions that reflects a default exclusionary approach. Yet in recent years, many clinicians, researchers, bioethicists, and professional societies have called for a reexamination of the routine practice of excluding pregnant women from clinical research. This paper proposes a practical approach to an ethical framework for IRBs that supports fair inclusion, rather than routine exclusion, of pregnant women in clinical research. This guidance will aid IRBs in ethically including and appropriately protecting pregnant women in research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Fair inclusion of pregnant women in clinical trials: an integrated scientific and ethical approach.
- Author
-
van der Graaf, Rieke, van der Zande, Indira S. E., den Ruijter, Hester M., Oudijk, Martijn A., van Delden, Johannes J. M., Oude Rengerink, Katrien, and Groenwold, Rolf H. H.
- Subjects
PREGNANCY complications ,MATERNAL health ,PREGNANCY & psychology ,FETAL development ,PRENATAL care - Abstract
Background: Since pregnant women are severely underrepresented in clinical research, many take the position that the exclusion of pregnant women from research must be justified unless there are compelling "scientific reasons" for their exclusion. However, it is questionable whether this approach renders research with pregnant women fair. This paper analyzes and evaluates when research with pregnant women can be considered as fair and what constitutes scientific reasons for exclusion.Methods: Conceptual ethical and methodological analysis and evaluation of fair inclusion.Results: Fair inclusion of pregnant women means (1) that pregnant women who are eligible are not excluded solely for being pregnant and (2) that the research interests of pregnant women are prioritized, meaning that they ought to receive substantially more attention. Fairness does not imply that pregnant women should be included in virtually every research project, as including only a few pregnant women in a population consisting only of women will not help to determine the effectiveness and safety of a treatment in pregnant women. Separate trials in pregnant women may be preferable once we assume, or know, that effects of interventions in pregnant women differ from the effects in other subpopulations, or when we assume, or know, that there are no differences. In the latter case, it may be preferable to conduct post-marketing studies or establish registries. If there is no conclusive evidence indicating either differences or equivalence of effects between pregnant and non-pregnant women, yet it seems unlikely that major differences or exact equivalence exist, the inclusion of pregnant women should be sufficient. Depending on the research question, this boils down to representativeness in terms of the proportion of pregnant and non-pregnant women, or to oversampling pregnant women.Conclusions: Fair inclusion of pregnant women in research implies that separate trials in pregnant women should be promoted. Inclusion of pregnant women has to be realized at the earliest phases of the research process. In addition to researchers and research ethics committees, scientific advisory councils, funders, drug regulatory agencies, pharmaceutical companies, journal editors and others have a joint responsibility to further develop the evidence base for drug use in pregnant women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Should pregnant women be excluded from a community-based lifestyle intervention trial? A case study.
- Author
-
Mathews, Elezebeth
- Subjects
BEHAVIOR modification ,CLINICAL medicine research ,GLUCOSE tolerance tests ,HEALTH behavior ,MEDICAL screening ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,PREGNANT women ,RESEARCH ethics ,RISK assessment ,COMMUNITY-based social services ,AT-risk people - Abstract
Kerala, the southernmost Indian state, is known as the diabetes capital of the country. A community-based lifestyle modification program was implemented in the rural areas of Kerala, India, to assess effectiveness in reducing the incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) among individuals at high risk. High-risk individuals for T2DM were identified through home screening and enrolled into the program after an oral glucose tolerance test to rule out T2DM. Pregnant women were excluded from participation in the trial without justification. An analysis is offered to show that exclusion in this case compromised the ethical requirements of fairness and favorable risk-benefit ratio: specifically, pregnant women were deprived of the benefits of screening for high-risk status and subsequent potential involvement in the lifestyle modification intervention, an effective preventive strategy. Exclusion of pregnant women from translational and implementation research with known benefits over risk violates several ethical principles and further limits the exploration and advancement of research for future disease prevention in the population at large. Clearer guidelines on minimal risk and benefit need to be established in order to facilitate research that is beneficial to pregnant women and the developing fetus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The elusive ideal of inclusiveness: lessons from a worldwide survey of neurologists on the ethical issues raised by whole-genome sequencing.
- Author
-
Hurlimann, Thierry, Groisman, Iris Jaitovich, Godard, Béatrice, and Jaitovich Groisman, Iris
- Subjects
NUCLEOTIDE sequencing ,NEUROLOGISTS ,INDIVIDUALIZED medicine ,STAKEHOLDERS ,MIDDLE-income countries ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,DEVELOPING countries ,EPILEPSY ,ETHICS ,GENETIC research ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL personnel ,RESEARCH funding ,RESEARCH ethics ,SOCIAL justice ,TECHNOLOGY ,GENOMICS ,SEQUENCE analysis - Abstract
The anticipation of ethical issues that may arise with the clinical use of genomic technologies is crucial to envision their future implementation in a manner sensitive to local contexts. Yet, populations in low- and middle-income countries are underrepresented in studies that aim to explore stakeholders' perspectives on the use of such technologies. Within the framework of a research project entitled "Personalized medicine in the treatment of epilepsy", we sought to increase inclusiveness by widening the reach of our survey, inviting neurologists from around the world to share their views and practices regarding the use of whole-genome sequencing in clinical neurology and its associated ethics. We discuss herein the compelling scientific and ethical reasons that led us to attempt to recruit neurologists worldwide, despite the lack, in many low- or middle-income countries, of access to genomic technologies. Recruitment procedures and their results are presented and discussed, as well as the barriers we faced. We conclude that inclusive recruitment remains a challenging, albeit necessary and legitimate, endeavour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. When Is It Acceptable to Vaccinate Pregnant Women? Risk, Ethics, and Politics of Governance in Epidemic Crises
- Author
-
Graham, Ashley L.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. From presumptive exclusion towards fair inclusion: perspectives on the involvement of women living with HIV in clinical trials, including stakeholders' views
- Author
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Angelina Namiba, Longret Kwardem, Rageshri Dhairyawan, Fiona Hale, Janine McGregor Read, Jane Anderson, and Alice Welbourn
- Subjects
clinical trials ,Infectious Diseases ,Editorial ,Pharmacology (medical) ,HIV and Women’s Health: Where Are We Now? ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,women living with HIV ,meaningful involvement ,presumptive exclusion ,fair inclusion - Published
- 2021
17. The Fifth Face of Fair Subject Selection: Population Grouping
- Author
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Tomasz Żuradzki
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Research ethics ,Health Policy ,Population ,Face (sociological concept) ,Subject (documents) ,06 humanities and the arts ,fair subject selection ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,fair inclusion ,Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Clinical research ethics ,fair opportunity ,justice in clinical research ,clinical research ethics ,060301 applied ethics ,10. No inequality ,education ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Selection (genetic algorithm) ,vulnerable populations - Abstract
The article by MacKay and Saylor (2020) claims that the principle of fair subject selection yields conflicting imperatives (e.g. in the case of pregnant women) and should be understood as "a bundle of four distinct sub-principles" (i.e. fair inclusion, burden sharing, opportunity, distribution of third-party risks), each having conflicting normative recommendations (MacKay and Saylor 2020). The authors also offer guidance as to how we should navigate between subprinciples that may conflict with each other. The problem is a crucial one since fair subject selection is one of the principles regulating clinical research that produces generalizable knowledge with the potential of improving people’s health. Therefore, there may be cases where the way in which participants are selected directly influences the generalizability (or its lack) of the clinically relevant knowledge and its value (if any) to different groups. In my commentary article, written from the philosophical perspective, I notice a number of interrelated problems which I believe have not been discussed thoroughly in the target article: (1) the precise way in which health care priority setting should influence the content of health research priority setting and fair inclusion principles; (2) the distinction between group and individual benefits and burdens from clinical research; (3) the reference class problem in medical research.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. From presumptive exclusion towards fair inclusion: perspectives on the involvement of women living with HIV in clinical trials, including stakeholders' views.
- Author
-
Namiba A, Kwardem L, Dhairyawan R, Hale F, McGregor Read J, Anderson J, and Welbourn A
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Conflict of interest statement: The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Fair Inclusion of Pregnant Women in Clinical Research
- Author
-
van der Zande, I.S.E., van Delden, Hans, van der Graaf, R, Oudijk, Martijn, and University Utrecht
- Subjects
obstetrics ,research ethics ,vulnerability ,trials ,acceptable risks ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,pregnant women ,fair inclusion - Abstract
Background: There has always been a reluctance to include pregnant women in clinical research, due to a fear of harm to the foetus. At the same time, there is a need for evidence-based information on medications and treatments for pregnant women who are or become ill during their pregnancy, which can only be gathered through research in the population of pregnant women. For this reason, inclusion of pregnant women has been promoted in the last decades by bioethicists, pharmacologists, regulators and researchers. Yet despite efforts to include pregnant women in clinical research, they are still underrepresented. There are a number of open issues and it is likely that there are ethical reasons underlying the continuous underrepresentation of pregnant women. Addressing these ethical reasons may change the status quo. The four main issues that are addressed in this thesis are: i) acceptable level of risk, ii) vulnerability, iii) fair inclusion, and iv) research design. The main objective of this thesis is to challenge the underrepresentation of pregnant women by developing a normative framework specifying the conditions under which pregnant women could be included in clinical research. Methods: In this thesis we used an empirical-ethical approach, combining empirical data with normative reflection. Empirical study of established ethical issues may clarify the extent of real and perceived problems and the way people think about them in relation to inclusion of pregnant women in clinical research. Normative evaluation of these problems may contribute to fair inclusion of pregnant women in research. The mixed-methods approach is supported by the sound methodology of the Normative-Empirical Reflective Equilibrium. Results: Through reflection on the four ethical issues and the main findings of this thesis we developed a normative framework in which we specify four normative considerations under which pregnant women may be included in clinical research: i) acceptable levels of risk for pregnant women should be formulated through a deliberative process balancing risks and benefits and the outcome should henceforth be respected, ii) pregnant women should only be deemed vulnerable when they encounter a higher exposure to risk due to a lack of scientific knowledge, iii) fair inclusion of pregnant women implies that separate trials in pregnant women should be promoted and that prioritising their research interests is a shared responsibility of all actors involved in the research process, and iv) pregnant women may be early included in the drug development process, provided that prerequisites and safety and efficacy data are adequately addressed and safeguarded throughout the process. Conclusions: With regard to the inclusion of pregnant women in clinical research, this thesis has answered ethical questions relating to acceptable levels of risk, vulnerability, fair inclusion and research design. At the same time, we have indicated issues that may need further ethical exploration. As underrepresentation of pregnant women in itself remains an ethical issue, the way forward also requires a focus on the practical application of fair inclusion.
- Published
- 2017
20. Fair Inclusion of Pregnant Women in Clinical Research
- Subjects
obstetrics ,research ethics ,vulnerability ,trials ,acceptable risks ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,pregnant women ,fair inclusion - Abstract
Background: There has always been a reluctance to include pregnant women in clinical research, due to a fear of harm to the foetus. At the same time, there is a need for evidence-based information on medications and treatments for pregnant women who are or become ill during their pregnancy, which can only be gathered through research in the population of pregnant women. For this reason, inclusion of pregnant women has been promoted in the last decades by bioethicists, pharmacologists, regulators and researchers. Yet despite efforts to include pregnant women in clinical research, they are still underrepresented. There are a number of open issues and it is likely that there are ethical reasons underlying the continuous underrepresentation of pregnant women. Addressing these ethical reasons may change the status quo. The four main issues that are addressed in this thesis are: i) acceptable level of risk, ii) vulnerability, iii) fair inclusion, and iv) research design. The main objective of this thesis is to challenge the underrepresentation of pregnant women by developing a normative framework specifying the conditions under which pregnant women could be included in clinical research. Methods: In this thesis we used an empirical-ethical approach, combining empirical data with normative reflection. Empirical study of established ethical issues may clarify the extent of real and perceived problems and the way people think about them in relation to inclusion of pregnant women in clinical research. Normative evaluation of these problems may contribute to fair inclusion of pregnant women in research. The mixed-methods approach is supported by the sound methodology of the Normative-Empirical Reflective Equilibrium. Results: Through reflection on the four ethical issues and the main findings of this thesis we developed a normative framework in which we specify four normative considerations under which pregnant women may be included in clinical research: i) acceptable levels of risk for pregnant women should be formulated through a deliberative process balancing risks and benefits and the outcome should henceforth be respected, ii) pregnant women should only be deemed vulnerable when they encounter a higher exposure to risk due to a lack of scientific knowledge, iii) fair inclusion of pregnant women implies that separate trials in pregnant women should be promoted and that prioritising their research interests is a shared responsibility of all actors involved in the research process, and iv) pregnant women may be early included in the drug development process, provided that prerequisites and safety and efficacy data are adequately addressed and safeguarded throughout the process. Conclusions: With regard to the inclusion of pregnant women in clinical research, this thesis has answered ethical questions relating to acceptable levels of risk, vulnerability, fair inclusion and research design. At the same time, we have indicated issues that may need further ethical exploration. As underrepresentation of pregnant women in itself remains an ethical issue, the way forward also requires a focus on the practical application of fair inclusion.
- Published
- 2017
21. The moral imperative to approve pregnant women's participation in randomized clinical trials for pregnancy and newborn complications.
- Author
-
Kaye, Dan Kabonge
- Subjects
PREGNANT women ,CLINICAL trials ,PREGNANCY complications ,PARTICIPATION - Abstract
Background: There is longstanding consensus on the need to include pregnant women in research. The goal of clinical research is to find highly regulated, carefully controlled, morally responsible ways to generate evidence about how to effectively and safely prevent illness or treat sick people. This manuscripts present a conceptual analysis of the ethicality of clinical trials in 3 scenarios: where the pregnant is involved in clinical trials as a participant during pregnancy for data that addresses pregnancy complications, where the pregnant woman consents to clinical trial participation for an unborn baby that has complications, to generate data on complications at this stage of life, and where the mother may consent for participation of their newborn child in clinical trials.Methods: Conceptual analysis.Findings: Investigators often choose to exclude pregnant women and newborns from research, even where there is possibility for them to benefit from the study intervention. Objections include vulnerability of pregnant women, altered pharmacokinetics and risk of adverse effects, with a need to balance potential maternal and fetal risks and benefits of research participation. While the objections may be valid, not performing research magnifies what should be a carefully controlled risk during research, pushing this risk into the clinical setting, and subsequently posing a challenge to clinicians who are faced with making treatment decisions for pregnant patients with limited evidence of efficacy and safety. The potential benefits of fair inclusion in clinical trials outweigh the potential risks.Conclusion: Research involving pregnant women is necessary to provide women with effective treatment during pregnancy, to promote fetal safety (such as by avoiding the clinical use of drugs that may be harmful to the developing fetus), and to reduce avoidable harm from suboptimal care (such as from underdosing) and to provide pregnant women, their fetuses and newborns (with access to potential benefits of research participation). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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