Human tissue research: a european perspective on the ethical and legal challenges
Lenk, Christian
Hoppe, Nils
Beier, Katharina
Wiesemann, Claudia
The use of human tissue for medical research and scientific progress raises many ethical and legal challenges. This multi-authored interdisciplinary text provides a fascinating insight into interlinking research perspectives and serves as a comprehensive reference to the state of play ethically and legally in Europe. INDICE: Preface: Introduction by the editors; 1 - Key concepts of the ethical debate; 1: Y. Michael Barilan: The biomedical uses of the body: lessonsfrom the history of human rights and dignity; 2: Rieke van der Graaf and Johannes J. M. van Delden: Exploring an alternative for informed consent in biobank research; 3: Austen Garwood-Gowers: Respect as a precondition for use of human tissue for research purposes; 4: Nils Hoppe: Risky business - re-evaluatingparticipant risk in biobanking; 5: Nadja K. Kanellopoulou: Reciprocity, trust, and public interest in research biobanking: in search for a balance; 6: Christian Lenk: Taking solidarity seriously: do biobank institutions have a moral obligation to inform their patients on incidental health findings?; 7: Katharina Beier: Beyond the dichotomy of individualism and solidarity: participation in biobank research in Sweden and Norway; 2 - The legal regulation of human tissue research; 8: José Miola: Law, ethics, and human tissue research - integration or competition?; 9: Remigius N. Nwabueze: Legal paradigms of human tissues; 10: Bianka S. Dörr: Research with human biological material and personal data in biobanks - legal and regulatory framework in Switzerland; 11: Virginie Commin: Legal issues surrounding French research-focused biobanks; 12: Antonio G. Spagnolo, Viviana Daloiso and Lara Parente: Biobanks: ethical and legal aspects of the collection and storage of human biological material in Italy; 13: Jasper Bovenberg: How to achieve 'free movement of tissue' in the EU research area; 3 - Practices - disciplinary perspectives; 14: Christoph Brochhausen, Nabila Ahmed, Nicolas Roßricker and C. James Kirkpatrick: Ethical recommendations for the use of human biological material stored in pathology archives for research purposes; 15: Leen Trommelmans, Joseph Selling and Kris Dierickx: Informed consent when donating cells for the production of human tissue engineered products; 16: Susanne Weber, Dana Wilson-Kovacs and Christine Hauskeller: The regulation of autologous stem cells in heart repair: comparing the UK and Germany; 17: Milena D. Bister: Discovering informed consent: a case study on the practice of informed consent to tissue donation in Austria; Epilogue: Conclusions and future prospects from the articles of the present volume by the editors
- ISBN: 978-0-19-958755-1
- Editorial: Oxford University
- Encuadernacion: Cartoné
- Páginas: 216
- Fecha Publicación: 27/01/2011
- Nº Volúmenes: 1
- Idioma: Inglés