A New Edition of Developing World Bioethics Is Now Available

September 18, 2019

Developing World Bioethics (vol. 18, no. 4, 2018) is available online by subscription only.

Articles include:

  • “The Patient?Worker: A Model for Human Research Subjects and Gestational Surrogates” by Emma Ryman and Katy Fulfer
  • The Views of Ethics Committee Members and Medical Researchers on the Return of Individual Research Results and Incidental Findings, Ownership Issues and Benefit Sharing in Biobanking Research in a South Indian City” by Manjulika Vaz, Mario Vaz, and Srinivasan K
  • “Defining Health Research for Development: The Perspective of Stakeholders from an International Health Research Partnership in Ghana and Tanzania” by Claire Leonie Ward et al.
  • “Mapping Research Ethics Committees in Africa: Evidence of the Growth of Ethics Review of Health Research in Africa” by Boitumelo Mokgatla, Carel IJsselmuiden, Doug Wassenaar, and Mary Kasule
  • “Informed Consent, Community Engagement, and Study Participation at a Research Site in Kigali, Rwanda” by Jennifer Ilo van Nuil et al.
  • “Conceptualizations of Fairness and Legitimacy in the Context of Ethiopian Health Priority Setting: Reflections on the Applicability of Accountability for Reasonableness” by Kadia Petricca and Asfaw Bekele
  • “Regulating Clinical Trials in India: The Economics of Ethics” by Gerard Porter
  • “Research in Epidemic and Emergency Situations: A Model for Collaboration and Expediting Ethics Review in Two Caribbean Countries” by Derrick Aarons
  • “Haitian People’s Expectations Regarding Post?Disaster Humanitarian Aid Teams’ Actions” by Lonzozou Kpanake, Ronald Jean?Jacques, Paul Clay Sorum, and Etienne Mullet
  • “‘You Cannot Collect Data Using Your Own Resources and Put It on Open Access’: Perspectives from Africa about Public Health Data?Sharing” by Evelyn Anane?Sarpong et al.
  • “Community Sensitization and Decision?Making for Trial Participation: A Mixed?Methods Study from The Gambia” by Susan Dierickx
  • “‘We Are the Eyes and Ears of Researchers and Community’: Understanding the Role of Community Advisory Groups in Representing Researchers and Communities in Malawi” by Deborah Nyirenda et al.