How Ethics In Scientific Studies Have Been Shaped
IFLScience
0:00 Research involving human subjects is littered with a history of scandal
0:04 that often shapes people's views of the ethics of research.
0:07 Often the earliest cited case is English physician Edward Jenner's
0:11 development of the smallox vaccine [music] in 1796 where he injected
0:16 an 8-year-old child with pus taken from a cowpos infection and then
0:20 deliberately exposed him to an infected [music] carrier of small pox.
0:23 Although Jenna's experiment was fortunately successful,
0:27 the method of exposing a child to a deadly disease
0:29 in this way would undoubtedly nowadays be seen as unacceptable.
0:32 [music] Perhaps the most notorious cases of unethical research were revealed
0:38 during the Nuremberg trials concerning [music]
0:40 Nazi experiments on concentration camp prisoners.
0:43 This research included involuntary sterilization, [music] inducing hypothermia,
0:49 and exposing their subjects to diseases [music] such as tuberculosis.
0:53 Yet, despite the litany of failures
0:55 to maintain ethical standards [music] in research, these remain the exception,
0:59 and a focus on scandals can seriously
1:01 [music] distort proper discussion about research ethics.
1:05 Ultimately, there is no universally accepted [music]
1:07 position as to how such research should proceed.
1:11 Laws and codes are far too general for deciding such cases,
1:14 [music] which is where ethical judgments,
1:16 committees, and arguments come in that allow agreement to [music] be reached.
1:20 These can delay research or draw on resources available for a trial,
1:24 but [music] they are essential if we are to maintain a high level
1:27 of scrutiny in often complex situations [music]
1:30 and prevent further scandalous cases from arising.