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Trusting Doctors: Tricky Business When it Comes to Clinical Trials

Frances H. Miller
Boston University - School of Law



Boston University Law Review, Vol. 81, Pp. 423, 2001

Abstract:     
This article examines the troublesome ethical dilemmas arising out of physician conflicts of interest in the context of research on human beings. It focuses on the inevitable conflict between the objectives of clinical investigators and those of their human subjects to illuminate subtle divergences of interest in doctor-patient relationships that patients often do not recognize - or want to believe. Once perceived, however, these potentially corroding conflicts can stun research subjects and their families, and leave them feeling deeply betrayed by their clinicians. The article concludes that a researcher's substantial financial conflicts constitute material information which, absent compelling circumstances, the researcher ought to disclose to human subjects as a matter of course.

Accepted Paper Series

Date posted: July 31, 2001 ; Last revised: November 13, 2001

Suggested Citation

Miller, Frances H., Trusting Doctors: Tricky Business When it Comes to Clinical Trials. Boston University Law Review, Vol. 81, Pp. 423, 2001. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=275628 or doi:10.2139/ssrn.275628


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Contact Information

Frances H. Miller (Contact Author)
Boston University - School of Law ( email )
765 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, MA 02215
United States
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