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Research Victims Testify before the National Bioethics Advisory Commission
National Bioethics Advisory Commission
Thursday, September 18, 1997
9000 Rockville Pike Building 31 6th Floor, Conference Room 10 Bethesda,
Maryland 20892
Eberlin Reporting Service
14208 Piccadilly Road Silver Spring, Maryland
20906
(301) 460-8369
I N D E X
Update and Overview James Childress 1
The Importance of Placebo-Controlled (or Other Difference-Showing)
Trials Robert Temple 10
Public Testimony on the Issue of the Cognitively Impaired as Research
Subjects 54
Discussion: Protecting Cognitively Impaired Research Subjects 203
Report on Survey of Federal Agencies 270
Bill Freeman
Joel Mangel
Emily Feinstein
Public Testimony on the Issue of the Cognitively Impaired as Research Subjects
Mr. Robert Aller
Ms. Janice Becker
Mr. Joseph Friend
Ms. Arlis Neason & 15 year old son, Jeffrey
Ms. Shalmah Lee Prince
Dr. Stephen Post
Ms. Beverly Post
Ms. Maggie Scherie-Lurie
Ms. Vera Hassner Sharav
Dr. Arun Guha
Andy Brownstein & parents
Mel and Muriel Brownstein
Dr. Judith Vukov
DR. CHILDRESS: Thank you again. All right.
We turn now to our public hearing which is an indispensable part of our
effort to chart our course, our direction or a report on decision
impaired research subjects and possible guidelines or special
protections for those subjects.
Several people have already indicated, and their names appear on the
sheet, that they would like to present in this period. If there are
others who wanted to present on this particular topic, that is decision
impaired research subjects, do -- I guess Pat Norris is at the desk? Pat
Norris is here. -- do indicate to her that you would like to so we can
try to be aware of the time as we are moving along to be sure we get
everyone in.
We will have subsequent public testimony on other topics relating to
research involving human subjects. Today we are looking only at
decisionally impaired research subjects.
We are grateful to those who have responded and their names appear on
the list. We will go down the list in alphabetical order but we are
treating the discussion of the New York case, T.D., as a separate matter
and will hear from the different parties involved in that later this
morning.
We are also grateful for the written testimony that several of you have
provided. Several of you are planning to testify orally today, as well
as others who could not testify and who also submitted written
testimony.
We will ask each person, and we have indicated this in advance, to
restrict his or her initial comments to five minutes and given the fact
that we have already lost a lot of time and out of fairness and equity
to others who will be wanting to speak I will try to be a stronger chair
and enforce that.
We will want to have an opportunity to ask questions so it is really
important to stick to the five minute limit so we will have a chance to
engage you in discussion because there will be things that we would like
to raise with you to again help us think through this project.
All right. If we are going now alphabetically is Mr. Robert Aller here?
All right. Thank you for joining us.
next
Note: Only portions of this NBAC transcript are available here. For a
full version of this document in pdf format go to:
http://bioethics.georgetown.edu/nbac/transcripts/sep97/human.pdf.
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