Rethinking the Conduct of Psychiatric Research
- 1 February 1997
- journal article
- editorial
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of General Psychiatry
- Vol. 54 (2) , 117-120
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.1997.01830140025004
Abstract
WHY reconsider how we conduct psychiatric research, as Bonnie1and Elliott2urge in this issue of theArchives? To be sure, several highly publicized cases have raised questions regarding the adequacy of current regulatory structures for the protection of subjects (New York Times. March 10, 1994:A-1 and March 4, 1995:21;Chronicle of Higher Education. March 31, 1995: A27). Adverse media coverage, however, even when it stimulates congressional hearings (New York Times. May 24, 1994:A-13), is not necessarily a sound basis on which to reopen complex issues of policy. In this case, though, there are at least 2 reasons to encourage further systematic attention to the conduct of psychiatric research. First, doubts about whether protections are adequate to safeguard the interests of research subjects with mental illness threaten to split the alliance of family members and psychiatric researchers, a union that has become crucial for sustaining political support forKeywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reasoning in depression: Impairment on a concept discrimination learning taskCognition and Emotion, 1995
- The MacArthur Treatment Competence Study. III: Abilities of patients to consent to psychiatric and medical treatments.Law and Human Behavior, 1995
- The effect of depression treatment on elderly patients' preferences for life-sustaining medical therapyAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1994
- The Psychometric Properties of the Competency Interview ScheduleThe Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 1994
- Depression, competence, and the right to refuse lifesaving medical treatmentAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1994
- Accountability in research using persons with mental illnessAccountability in Research, 1993
- Is depressive realism real?Clinical Psychology Review, 1991
- Depressed Subjects Unwittingly Overreport Poor Social Adjustment Which They Reappraise When RecoveredJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1991
- Assessing Patients' Capacities to Consent to TreatmentNew England Journal of Medicine, 1988
- The structure of informed consent in psychiatric researchBehavioral Sciences & the Law, 1983