Research
methodology
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• Tuskegee Syphilis Study in USA (1932-1970s) to study the long-term effects of
untreated syphilis- 400 men out of the 600 participants were never told about the
infection and were never treated despite the fact that
treatment became available
• A study to examine the natural progression of cervical carcinoma in New Zealand
(1980s)-conventional treatment was withheld from women in trial and women were not
asked
for their consent
Ethical decisions are based on three main approaches: duty, rights and goal-based. The
goal-based approach assumes that we should try to produce the greatest possible balance of
value over disvalue. Discomfort to one individual may be justified by the consequences for
the society as a whole. According
to the duty-based approach, your duty as a researcher is
founded on your own moral principles. As a researcher, you will
have a duty to yourself and
to the individual who is participating in the research. So even if the outcome of the proposed
research is for a good cause, if it involves the researcher lying or
deceiving his subjects in
some way, then this would be regarded as unethical. In the rights-based approach, the rights
of the individual are
assumed to be all-important, thus a subject’s right to refuse must be
upheld whatever the consequences for the research.
Research studies should be judged ethically on three sets of criteria, namely:
ethical
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