Applying bioethical principles to human biomonitoring

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Bioethical principles are widely used as a normative framework in areas of human research and medical care. In recent years there has been increasing formalization of their use in public health decisions. The "traditional bioethical principles" are appl...

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Main Author: Harrison Myron
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2008-01-01
Series:Environmental Health
Online Access:http://www.ehjournal.net/content/pdf/1476-069X-7-S1-S8.pdf
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spelling doaj-45e06b0ec95d49c8be23a39f6c39b7432020-11-24T22:14:27ZengBMCEnvironmental Health1476-069X2008-01-017SupplS8Applying bioethical principles to human biomonitoringHarrison Myron<p>Abstract</p> <p>Bioethical principles are widely used as a normative framework in areas of human research and medical care. In recent years there has been increasing formalization of their use in public health decisions. The "traditional bioethical principles" are applied in this discussion to the important issue human biomonitoring for environmental exposures. They are: (1) Autonomy – Also known as the "respect for humans" principle, people understand their own best interests; (2) Beneficence – "do good" for people; (3) Nonmaleficence – "do no harm"; (4) Justice – fair distribution of benefits and costs (including risks to health) across stakeholders.</p> <p>Some of the points made are: (1) There is not a single generic bioethical analysis applicable to the use of human biomonitoring data, each specific use requires a separate deliberation; (2) Using unidentified, population-based biomonitoring information for risk assessment or population surveillance raises fewer bioethical concerns than personally identified biomonitoring information such as employed in health screening; (3) Companies should proactively apply normative bioethical principles when considering the disposition of products and by-products in the environment and humans; (4) There is a need for more engagement by scholars on the bioethical issues raised by the use of biomarkers of exposure; (5) Though our scientific knowledge of biology will continue to increase, there will always be a role for methods or frameworks to resolve substantive disagreements in the meaning of this data that are matters of belief rather than knowledge.</p> http://www.ehjournal.net/content/pdf/1476-069X-7-S1-S8.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Harrison Myron
spellingShingle Harrison Myron
Applying bioethical principles to human biomonitoring
Environmental Health
author_facet Harrison Myron
author_sort Harrison Myron
title Applying bioethical principles to human biomonitoring
title_short Applying bioethical principles to human biomonitoring
title_full Applying bioethical principles to human biomonitoring
title_fullStr Applying bioethical principles to human biomonitoring
title_full_unstemmed Applying bioethical principles to human biomonitoring
title_sort applying bioethical principles to human biomonitoring
publisher BMC
series Environmental Health
issn 1476-069X
publishDate 2008-01-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Bioethical principles are widely used as a normative framework in areas of human research and medical care. In recent years there has been increasing formalization of their use in public health decisions. The "traditional bioethical principles" are applied in this discussion to the important issue human biomonitoring for environmental exposures. They are: (1) Autonomy – Also known as the "respect for humans" principle, people understand their own best interests; (2) Beneficence – "do good" for people; (3) Nonmaleficence – "do no harm"; (4) Justice – fair distribution of benefits and costs (including risks to health) across stakeholders.</p> <p>Some of the points made are: (1) There is not a single generic bioethical analysis applicable to the use of human biomonitoring data, each specific use requires a separate deliberation; (2) Using unidentified, population-based biomonitoring information for risk assessment or population surveillance raises fewer bioethical concerns than personally identified biomonitoring information such as employed in health screening; (3) Companies should proactively apply normative bioethical principles when considering the disposition of products and by-products in the environment and humans; (4) There is a need for more engagement by scholars on the bioethical issues raised by the use of biomarkers of exposure; (5) Though our scientific knowledge of biology will continue to increase, there will always be a role for methods or frameworks to resolve substantive disagreements in the meaning of this data that are matters of belief rather than knowledge.</p>
url http://www.ehjournal.net/content/pdf/1476-069X-7-S1-S8.pdf
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