Glass Houses: The Power of Money in Bioethics Research

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    Abstract

    In this paper I explore the power of money in bioethics research and ask whether, while casting stones regarding financial conflicts of interest in health research, bioethics researchers are in fact living in glass houses. I first review the need for money in bioethics research, the sources of money, and key features of the money (specifically, the amount of money involved and the fact that the money often is embedded, encumbered, and required to be matched). Next, I explore a range of possible objectives for the money transfer. I then examine the effects of this transfer and raise some questions and concerns about the role of money in bioethics research. I close with some suggestions for possible responses to these questions and concerns—suggestions concerning what bioethics researchers as individuals and as a community could do to more positively and progressively harness the power of money in bioethics research.

    Original languageCanadian English
    JournalArticles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
    Volume2
    Issue number2
    Publication statusPublished - Jan. 1 2009

    Keywords

    • Health Research
    • Financial Conflicts of Interest
    • Bioethics Research

    Disciplines

    • Health Law and Policy

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