The culture of hope and ethical challenges in clinical trials : a qualitative study of oncologists and haematologists’ views

Article indépendant

GODSKESEN, Tove E | PETRI, Suzanne | ERIKSSON, Stefan | HALKOAHO, Arja | MANGSET, Margrete | NIELSEN, Zandra E

We do not know how much clinical physicians carrying out clinical trials in oncology and haematology struggle with ethical concerns. To our knowledge, no empirical research exists on these questions in a Nordic context. Therefore, this study aims to learn what kinds of ethical challenges physicians in Sweden, Denmark and Finland (n = 29) face when caring for patients in clinical trials; and what strategies, if any, they have developed to deal with them. The main findings were that clinical cancer trials pose ethical challenges related to autonomy issues, unreasonable hope for benefits and the therapeutic misconception. Nevertheless, some physicians expressed that struggling with such challenges was not of great concern. This conveys a culture of hope where health care professionals and patients uphold hope and mutually support belief in clinical trials. This culture being implicit, physicians need opportunities to deliberately reflect over the characteristics that should constitute this culture.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1477750919897379

Voir la revue «Clinical ethics»

Autres numéros de la revue «Clinical ethics»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

The culture of hope and ethical challenges in...

Article | GODSKESEN, Tove E | Clinical ethics

We do not know how much clinical physicians carrying out clinical trials in oncology and haematology struggle with ethical concerns. To our knowledge, no empirical research exists on these questions in a Nordic context. Therefore,...

The culture of hope and ethical challenges in...

Article indépendant | GODSKESEN, Tove E | Clinical ethics

We do not know how much clinical physicians carrying out clinical trials in oncology and haematology struggle with ethical concerns. To our knowledge, no empirical research exists on these questions in a Nordic context. Therefore,...

De la même série

The concept of futility in health : a scoping...

Article indépendant | DA SILVA VIEIRA, Joao Vítor | Clinical ethics | n°4 | vol.16

Introduction: Due to the constant scientific and technological development, health professionals are regularly confronted with situations in which there are always therapeutic options, regardless of the severity of the patient's c...

Counting the cost of denying assisted dying

Article indépendant | SHAW, David | Clinical ethics | n°2 | vol.15

In this paper, we propose and defend three economic arguments for permitting assisted dying. These arguments are not intended to provide a rationale for legalising assisted suicide or euthanasia in and of themselves; rather, they ...

The culture of hope and ethical challenges in...

Article indépendant | GODSKESEN, Tove E | Clinical ethics

We do not know how much clinical physicians carrying out clinical trials in oncology and haematology struggle with ethical concerns. To our knowledge, no empirical research exists on these questions in a Nordic context. Therefore,...

Perceptions of intensive care unit nurses of ...

Article indépendant | VIEIRA, João V. | Clinical ethics

Introduction: Intensive care units are contexts in which, due to the remarkable existence of particularly technological resources, interventions are promoted to extend the life of people who experience highly complex health situat...

Exposing futility by searching beneath the co...

Article indépendant | RICHARDS, Stephen | Clinical ethics

The concept of futility in medicine refers to the incapability of an intervention to achieve its goal. Futility determinations form the basis for withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining interventions. Criticisms of attempted f...

Chargement des enrichissements...