不知情代理同意的伦理缺陷:促进临床研究中对人的尊重。

Robert R Harrison
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在临床研究中,决策能力往往等同于不明确的自主权概念,而自主权往往等同于人格。根据这种观点,决策能力的丧失被视为自主权的丧失,而自主权的丧失又包含了人格的丧失。在这些哲学考虑与知情同意中的法律考虑的交叉点上,出现了一个伦理问题。由于没有足够决策能力的人无法提供具有法律效力的同意书,因此只有在代理 人代表该人给予许可的情况下才能参与研究。联邦法规和由此产生的机构政策允许根据州法律授权的代理 人同意医疗程序,通常是按照法律规定的优先关系分级,而不考虑代理 人对潜在研究对象当前与研究相关的价值观和偏好的实际了解。因此,研究企业往往会依赖那些没有关系或信息基础的代理,来做出与受试者的价值观和偏好相一致的注册决定。我从失去决策能力并不会改变人的道德地位、尊重人而不是尊重自主权才是核心伦理义务的角度出发,评估了允许对潜在研究对象的价值观和偏好一无所知的人做出注册决定的伦理影响,得出结论认为,依赖不知情的代理人并不是一种在伦理上站得住脚的临床研究对象注册方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The ethical inadequacy of uninformed surrogate consent: advancing respect for persons in clinical research.

In clinical research, decision-making capacity is often equated with unspecified conceptions of autonomy, and autonomy is often equated with personhood. On this view, the loss of decision-making capacity is seen as a loss of autonomy, and the loss of autonomy subsumes a loss of personhood. An ethical concern arises at the intersection of those philosophical considerations with the legal considerations in informed consent. Because persons with inadequate decision-making capacity cannot provide legally effective consent, enrollment in research can occur only if a surrogate gives permission on the person's behalf. Federal regulations and resulting institutional policies allow permission from surrogates empowered under state law to consent to medical treatment procedures, typically in a hierarchy of legislatively prioritized relationships lacking regard for what the surrogate actually knows about the current research-related values and preferences of the potential subject. As a result, the research enterprise often countenances reliance on surrogates who have no relational or informational basis for an enrollment decision that aligns with the values and preferences of the subject. Arguing from the perspective that losing decision-making capacity does not alter the moral status of persons, and that respect for persons rather than respect for autonomy is the central ethical obligation, I assess the ethical implications of allowing persons with no knowledge of the values and preferences of the potential subject to make enrollment decisions, concluding that reliance on uninformed surrogates is not an ethically defensible approach to enrolling subjects in clinical research.

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