Therapeutic research on children in low–income countries: studying trial communities

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Therapeutic research on children in low–income countries : studying trial communities. / Whyte, Susan Reynolds.

Optimizing Treatment for Children in the Developing World. red. / Stuart MacLeod; Suzanne Hill; Gideon Koren; Anders Rane. Springer, 2015. s. 45-52.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Whyte, SR 2015, Therapeutic research on children in low–income countries: studying trial communities. i S MacLeod, S Hill, G Koren & A Rane (red), Optimizing Treatment for Children in the Developing World. Springer, s. 45-52.

APA

Whyte, S. R. (2015). Therapeutic research on children in low–income countries: studying trial communities. I S. MacLeod, S. Hill, G. Koren, & A. Rane (red.), Optimizing Treatment for Children in the Developing World (s. 45-52). Springer.

Vancouver

Whyte SR. Therapeutic research on children in low–income countries: studying trial communities. I MacLeod S, Hill S, Koren G, Rane A, red., Optimizing Treatment for Children in the Developing World. Springer. 2015. s. 45-52

Author

Whyte, Susan Reynolds. / Therapeutic research on children in low–income countries : studying trial communities. Optimizing Treatment for Children in the Developing World. red. / Stuart MacLeod ; Suzanne Hill ; Gideon Koren ; Anders Rane. Springer, 2015. s. 45-52

Bibtex

@inbook{7ed07382af294d33b3e7e320bf072719,
title = "Therapeutic research on children in low–income countries: studying trial communities",
abstract = "Social scientists undertaking studies in developing countries focus on {\textquoteleft}trial communities{\textquoteright}: networks of funders, institutions, researchers, clinical staff, fieldworkers, and study participants. Whereas bioethicists consider universal ethical requirements, social scientists examine ethical practices in light of concerns and interests of parties involved in medical research. In conditions of poverty, high morbidity and weak public health services, subjects are heavily induced by the prospect of high quality care that researchers seem to offer. Studies of health research undertaken by well-established institutions in Africa show that parents eagerly have their children {\textquoteleft}join{\textquoteright} such projects. They assess benefits and risks less in research terms and more through overall trust in care provided previously by such institutions in the community. Bioethics should go beyond concern with protecting individual subjects from research risks and should view clinical care and research functions as indistinguishable for many who seek sustained support for the children{\textquoteright}s health.",
author = "Whyte, {Susan Reynolds}",
year = "2015",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783319157498 ",
pages = "45--52",
editor = "Stuart MacLeod and Hill, {Suzanne } and Gideon Koren and Anders Rane",
booktitle = "Optimizing Treatment for Children in the Developing World",
publisher = "Springer",
address = "Switzerland",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Therapeutic research on children in low–income countries

T2 - studying trial communities

AU - Whyte, Susan Reynolds

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - Social scientists undertaking studies in developing countries focus on ‘trial communities’: networks of funders, institutions, researchers, clinical staff, fieldworkers, and study participants. Whereas bioethicists consider universal ethical requirements, social scientists examine ethical practices in light of concerns and interests of parties involved in medical research. In conditions of poverty, high morbidity and weak public health services, subjects are heavily induced by the prospect of high quality care that researchers seem to offer. Studies of health research undertaken by well-established institutions in Africa show that parents eagerly have their children ‘join’ such projects. They assess benefits and risks less in research terms and more through overall trust in care provided previously by such institutions in the community. Bioethics should go beyond concern with protecting individual subjects from research risks and should view clinical care and research functions as indistinguishable for many who seek sustained support for the children’s health.

AB - Social scientists undertaking studies in developing countries focus on ‘trial communities’: networks of funders, institutions, researchers, clinical staff, fieldworkers, and study participants. Whereas bioethicists consider universal ethical requirements, social scientists examine ethical practices in light of concerns and interests of parties involved in medical research. In conditions of poverty, high morbidity and weak public health services, subjects are heavily induced by the prospect of high quality care that researchers seem to offer. Studies of health research undertaken by well-established institutions in Africa show that parents eagerly have their children ‘join’ such projects. They assess benefits and risks less in research terms and more through overall trust in care provided previously by such institutions in the community. Bioethics should go beyond concern with protecting individual subjects from research risks and should view clinical care and research functions as indistinguishable for many who seek sustained support for the children’s health.

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 9783319157498

SP - 45

EP - 52

BT - Optimizing Treatment for Children in the Developing World

A2 - MacLeod, Stuart

A2 - Hill, Suzanne

A2 - Koren, Gideon

A2 - Rane, Anders

PB - Springer

ER -

ID: 138351312