BMJ  2006;332:188-189 (28 January), doi:10.1136/bmj.332.7535.188

Editorial

Offering results to research participants

Is ethically right but not yet fully explored

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Do participants of research trials wish to be offered a summary of the trial results? This practice is being encouraged as a means of demonstrating greater respect for research participants: it recognises the central role of participants in the completion of research studies and avoids treating them as a means to an end.1 2 The International Ethical Guidelines for Biomedical Research Involving Human Subjects stipulate that offering results to subjects after study completion is an essential obligation of researchers (guideline 5, article 7).3 However, many national policies on research ethics do not mention this practice, and few research ethics boards or committees have policies or guidelines governing the process.4 This is mirrored in the low prevalence of offering to return results, which is documented in a wide variety of research settings.5

A paper by Dixon-Woods and colleagues in this issue (p 206) reports a study in which they . . . [Full text of this article]

S Danielle MacNeil, medical student

Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada B3K 6R8

Conrad V Fernandez, paediatric oncologist

Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada B3K 6R8
(conrad.fernandez@iwk.nshealth.ca)


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This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Dorsey, E. R., Beck, C. A., Adams, M., Chadwick, G., de Blieck, E. A., McCallum, C., Briner, L., Deuel, L., Clarke, A., Stewart, R., Shoulson, I., and the Huntington Study Group TREND-HD Investigat, (2008). Communicating Clinical Trial Results to Research Participants. Arch Neurol 65: 1590-1595 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Dinnett, E. M, Mungall, M. M B, Gordon, C., Ronald, E. S, Gaw, A. (2006). Patients need not give consent in all clinical education.. BMJ 332: 549-549 [Full text]  



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