Ethical considerations for drug abuse epidemiological research


Autoria(s): Fry, Craig L.; Hall, Wayne
Contribuinte(s)

Zili Sloboda

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

The mortality and morbidity caused by alcohol, tobacco and illicit drug misuse represents a significant public health burden (Ezzati et al., 2002). A key part of the public health response is the collection of epidemiological and social science data to define at-risk populations to identify opportunities for intervention and to evaluate the effectiveness of policies in preventing or treating drug misuse and drug-related harm. The systematic use of epidemiological and social science research methods to study illicit drug use is barely 40 years old in the United States and United Kingdom, which have pioneered this approach. Because of the sensitive nature of epidemiological research on illicit drug use a unique set of ethical challenges need to be explicitly addressed by the field. Although ethics guidelines have been proposed (Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences, 1991), scholarship on the ethics of epidemiology is scant, and consensus on core values not yet achieved (Coughlin, 2000).

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:71677

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Springer

Palavras-Chave #321202 Epidemiology #730205 Substance abuse #B1 #111706 Epidemiology #2201 Applied Ethics
Tipo

Book Chapter