Guinea Pigs on the payroll: The ethics of paying research subjects
- 1 October 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Accountability in Research
- Vol. 7 (1) , 3-20
- https://doi.org/10.1080/08989629908573939
Abstract
Regulatory bodies and scholars have traditionally conceptualized biomedical research on healthy subjects in the same way as research on patients. Guidelines and regulations have portrayed payment to a healthy subject as a potential constraint, or “undue influence,”; on the subject's free consent. In this essay we suggest an alternative way of conceptualizing research on healthy subjects, which sees the basic issue not as one of undue influence but as one of justice. Healthy subjects generally enroll in research protocols not for humanitarian reasons but for the money they will receive. Many of these protocols are conducted by profit‐driven corporations. Yet current guidelines and regulations prohibit subjects from negotiating for fair payment for the risks, discomforts and inconveniences they undergo, and IRBs are not staffed adequately to monitor the subject's safety. We propose to remedy the situation by regulating payment to healthy subjects as a labor relation.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inducement in ResearchBioethics, 1997
- Paying People to Participate in Research: Why not?Bioethics, 1997
- Motivation for participation in clinical trials of drugs for the treatment of asthma, seasonal allergic rhinitis, and perennial nonallergic rhinitisAnnals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology, 1996
- Motives and perception of healthy volunteers who participate in experimentsEuropean Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1993
- Weight of financial reward in the decision by medical students and experienced healthy volunteers to participate in clinical trialsEuropean Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1990
- Participation in a clinical trial: The patients' point of viewControlled Clinical Trials, 1985
- Attitudes toward clinical trials among patients and the publicJAMA, 1982
- 'Due' and 'Undue' Inducements: On Pasing Money to Research SubjectsIRB: Ethics & Human Research, 1981
- Free‐living volunteer's motivations and attitudes toward pharmacologic studies in manClinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 1977
- Experimentation with Human BeingsStanford Law Review, 1972