Researchers, clinicians and consumers differ in their view of what is to count as ethical research because of different backgrounds, different needs and different experiences. When they meet, and conflict, in universities and hospitals, this constitutes the ethical consideration which faces health researchers in the world today. This volume focuses on the various ways in which researchers from different backgrounds balance method with ethical responsibility in their research.
| ISBN | 1864481528 | | DEWEY edition | DC22 | | ISBN13 | 9781864481525 (What's this?) | | Pages | 280 | | Publisher | Allen & Unwin | | Weight (grammes) | 300 | | Imprint | Allen & Unwin | | Published in | Sydney | | Format | Hardback | | Height (mm) | 230 | | Publication date | 01 Jun 1996 | | Width (mm) | 152 | | DEWEY | 174.2 | | Academic level | Professional / Scholarly |
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Part 1 Ethics, ethics committees and the researcher: what's the use of bioethics, Max Charlesworth; is the tail wagging the dog on research ethics committees?, Paul N. McNeil; problems for the researcher - ethics and epidemiology, Judith Lumley; medicine and the ethical considerations of modernity, Paul Komesaroff. Part 2 Basic research and experimental designs: basic research and experiment, Ian McDonald; the ethics of allocation of resources on basic research, Richard Larkins; traditional scientific designs and ethics, Terry Nolan; the false dichotomy between clinical care and clinical research, Gordon Guyatt. Part 3 Social science disciplines - ethics and issues of methods: social science health research - an introduction, Jeanne Daly; unobtrusive methods in delicate situations, Allan Kellehear; my soul has gone - appropriate methods for a delicate situation, Pranee Liamputtong Rice; individual subject versus person in context in behavioural research in health, William Noble; ethical dilemmas in the science of scarcity - health economics and policy, Terri Jackson. Part 4 Representing community views: representing the community - issues from applied research experiences, Hal Kendig; ethics and health research in Aboriginal communities, Ian Anderson; women's health - methods and ethics across the life cycle, Johanna Wyn, Judith Chumley, Jeanne Daly; a consumer perspective on funding health promotion research, Rhonda Galbally. Part 5 The clinicians' view of research: clinicians studying their own practice - an introduction, Ian G. McDonald; mathematics models and clinical practice, Al Van Feinstein; studying narratives of ageing and social problems in medical encounters, Howard Waitzkin; primary care - issues for general practice research, Peter Mudge.