
Medical care and biomedical research are rapidly becoming global. Ethical questions that once arose only in the narrow context of the physician-patient relationship in relatively prosperous societies are now being raised across societies, cultures, and continents. For example, what should be the "standard of care" for clinical trials of medical innovations in poorer countries? Are researchers obligated to compare new therapies or drugs with the best known ones available, or can they use as a benchmark the actual treatments (or lack of treatments) available to poor people? Should pharmaceutical companies seeking to lower the costs of new drug trials be allowed to enrol citizens of less developed countries in them even when those individuals cannot afford and will not be eligible for the resulting drugs? More generally, should the norms of medicine and research be the same across cultures or can they adapt to local social, economic, or religious conditions? Global Bioethics gathers some of the world's leading bioethicists to explore many of the new questions raised by the globalization of medical care and biomedical research. Among the topics covered are the impact of globalization on the norms of medical ethics, the conduct of international research, the ethics of international collaborations, challenges to medical professionalism in the international setting, and the relation of religion to global bioethics.
This text investigates the ethical complexities and moral dilemmas emerging from the globalization of medical care and biomedical research in the twenty-first century. The authors, including Aine Donovan, Ronald M. Green, and Steven A. Jauss, curate a collection of essays from prominent bioethicists to address the tension between universal medical standards and diverse cultural, economic, and religious contexts. The work argues that traditional physician-patient ethics must expand to account for international disparities, corporate research practices, and cross-border collaborations.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this collection as a foundational resource for understanding the shift from localized medical ethics to a globalized framework. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, making it a standard reference for students and professionals in the fields of bioethics and international health policy.
Page Count:
367
Publication Date:
2008-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191609404
ISBN-13:
9780191609404
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