Addiction Research Ethics and the Belmont Principles: Do Drug Users Have a Different Moral Voice?
Creator
Fisher, Celia B
Bibliographic Citation
Substance use & misuse 2011; 46(6): 728-41
Abstract
This study used semi-structured interviews and content analysis to examine moral principles that street drug users apply to three hypothetical addiction research ethical dilemmas. Participants (n = 90) were ethnically diverse, economically disadvantaged drug users recruited in New York City in 2009 . Participants applied a wide range of contextually sensitive moral precepts, including respect, beneficence, justice, relationality, professional obligations, rules, and pragmatic self-interest. Limitations and implications for future research and the responsible conduct of addiction research are discussed.
Date
2011Collections
Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Marginalized Populations and Drug Addiction Research: Realism, Mistrust, and Misconception
Fisher, Celia B.; Oransky, Matthew; Mahadevan, Meena; Singer, Merrill; Mirhej, Greg; Hodge, Derrick (2008-05)