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Human Biospecimens Come from People.

Tom Tomlinson1, Raymond G De Vries2

  • 1Professor at the Center for Ethics and Humanities in the Life Sciences at Michigan State University.

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|March 22, 2019
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Broad consent for future research use of deidentified biospecimens and health information respects individual autonomy. This approach is ethically justified, despite common objections regarding rescue duties, selection bias, and cost.

Keywords:
Common Rulebroad consentdeidentified biospecimenshuman research ethicsinformed consentrespect for persons

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Area of Science:

  • Bioethics
  • Medical Research
  • Informed Consent

Background:

  • Current regulations (revised Common Rule) and prevailing bioethical views often oppose broad consent for future research on deidentified biospecimens and health information.
  • Individual differences in risk perception and willingness to participate in research necessitate a nuanced approach to consent.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To argue for the ethical imperative of seeking broad consent for the future research use of deidentified biospecimens and health information collected during medical care.
  • To challenge common objections to broad consent in bioethics and research.

Main Methods:

  • Ethical argumentation analyzing the moral considerations against broad consent.
  • Examination of three specific objections: duty of easy rescue, selection bias, and prohibitive costs.

Main Results:

  • The study argues that respecting individual autonomy requires seeking broad consent for unspecified future research uses of biospecimens and health information.
  • The examined moral considerations (duty of easy rescue, selection bias, cost) are deemed insufficient to override the ethical requirement for consent.

Conclusions:

  • Broad consent for deidentified biospecimens and health information is ethically mandated as an expression of respect for persons.
  • Ethical objections based on duty of rescue, research validity, and cost are unconvailing.
  • Implementing broad consent is crucial for upholding patient autonomy in the context of future medical research.