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  1. A Legacy of Silence: Bioethics and the Culture of Pain. [REVIEW]Ben A. Rich - 1997 - Journal of Medical Humanities 18 (4):233-259.
    For over 20 years the medical literature has carefully documented the undertreatment of all types of pain by physicians. During this same period, as the field of bioethics came of age, the phenomenon of undertreated pain received almost no attention from the bioethics literature. This article takes bioethicists to task for failing to recognize the undertreatment of pain as a major ethical, and not merely a clinical, failing of the medical profession. The nature and extent of the problem of undertreated (...)
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  • Decisionally Impaired Persons in Research: Refining the Proposed Refinements.Evan G. DeRenzo - 1997 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 25 (2-3):139-149.
    The ethics of involving persons with cognitive impairments and/or mental illness in research continues to gain academic and public attention. Concerns about the ability of such persons to provide ethically and legally valid consent and about the appropriateness of their research involvement in certain categories of studies have resulted in publication of guidelines, position papers, standards, and court decisions. These analyses address not only when and from whom informed consent may be obtained but also under what conditions it is ethically (...)
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