Towards collaborative partnerships in the governance of Canadian health research ethics

The most valuable resources common to all human health research endeavors are those individuals who voluntarily subject themselves to potential risks for the hope of improving human health and advancing medical science. Although human subjects’ participation in health research is acknowledged as ins...

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Main Author: Taylor, Kimberly
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/13716
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-137162014-03-26T03:36:15Z Towards collaborative partnerships in the governance of Canadian health research ethics Taylor, Kimberly The most valuable resources common to all human health research endeavors are those individuals who voluntarily subject themselves to potential risks for the hope of improving human health and advancing medical science. Although human subjects’ participation in health research is acknowledged as instrumental to our understanding of health and illness and thereby an interest to society, the role of human subjects in determining how research is conducted, monitored, and, if successful, translated into health care, has been minimal until fairly recently. This paper argues from both moral and political grounds that meaningful and effective partnerships between human subjects and research communities ought to be mandated as a standard practice within Canadian policy guidelines for all health research initiatives that are conducive to collaborative engagements. By rendering decision-making a truly democratic endeavor, with the implementation of collaborative relationships between scientific and human subject communities with a similar framework to the Tri-Council Policy Statement and the Canadian Institute of Health Research’s guidelines on research involving Aboriginal People, a more transparent and accountable health research system will ensue. As a result, I argue, the health research enterprise in Canada as a whole will engender greater public trust. 2009-10-07T20:41:59Z 2009-10-07T20:41:59Z 2009 2009-10-07T20:41:59Z 2009-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/13716 eng University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description The most valuable resources common to all human health research endeavors are those individuals who voluntarily subject themselves to potential risks for the hope of improving human health and advancing medical science. Although human subjects’ participation in health research is acknowledged as instrumental to our understanding of health and illness and thereby an interest to society, the role of human subjects in determining how research is conducted, monitored, and, if successful, translated into health care, has been minimal until fairly recently. This paper argues from both moral and political grounds that meaningful and effective partnerships between human subjects and research communities ought to be mandated as a standard practice within Canadian policy guidelines for all health research initiatives that are conducive to collaborative engagements. By rendering decision-making a truly democratic endeavor, with the implementation of collaborative relationships between scientific and human subject communities with a similar framework to the Tri-Council Policy Statement and the Canadian Institute of Health Research’s guidelines on research involving Aboriginal People, a more transparent and accountable health research system will ensue. As a result, I argue, the health research enterprise in Canada as a whole will engender greater public trust.
author Taylor, Kimberly
spellingShingle Taylor, Kimberly
Towards collaborative partnerships in the governance of Canadian health research ethics
author_facet Taylor, Kimberly
author_sort Taylor, Kimberly
title Towards collaborative partnerships in the governance of Canadian health research ethics
title_short Towards collaborative partnerships in the governance of Canadian health research ethics
title_full Towards collaborative partnerships in the governance of Canadian health research ethics
title_fullStr Towards collaborative partnerships in the governance of Canadian health research ethics
title_full_unstemmed Towards collaborative partnerships in the governance of Canadian health research ethics
title_sort towards collaborative partnerships in the governance of canadian health research ethics
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/13716
work_keys_str_mv AT taylorkimberly towardscollaborativepartnershipsinthegovernanceofcanadianhealthresearchethics
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