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  1. Children's Capacities to Decide about Participation in Research.Lois A. Weithorn - 1983 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 5 (2):1.
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  • Does Recent Research on Adolescent Brain Development Inform the Mature Minor Doctrine?L. Steinberg - 2013 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 38 (3):256-267.
    US Supreme Court rulings concerning sanctions for juvenile offenders have drawn on the science of brain development and concluded that adolescents are inherently less mature than adults in ways that render them less culpable. This conclusion departs from arguments made in cases involving the mature minor doctrine, in which teenagers have been portrayed as comparable to adults in their capacity to make medical decisions. I attempt to reconcile these apparently incompatible views of adolescents’ decision-making competence. Adolescents are indeed less mature (...)
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  • Moral conflict in clinical trials.Maria Merritt - 2005 - Ethics 115 (2):306-330.
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  • Moral conflict and competing duties in the initiation of a biomedical HIV prevention trial with minor adolescents.Amelia S. Knopf, Amy Lewis Gilbert, Gregory D. Zimet, Bill G. Kapogiannis, Sybil G. Hosek, J. Dennis Fortenberry & Mary A. Ott - 2017 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 8 (3):145-152.
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  • Reducing Health Disparities and Enhancing the Responsible Conduct of Research Involving LGBT Youth.Celia B. Fisher & Brian Mustanski - 2014 - Hastings Center Report 44 (s4):28-31.
    Although there is clearly a need for evidenced‐based behavioral or biomedical prevention or treatment programs for suicide, substance abuse, and sexual health targeted to members of the LGBT population under the age of eighteen, few such programs exist, due in substantial part to limited research knowledge. Ambiguities in regulations that govern human subjects protections and the related inconsistencies in institutional review board (IRB) interpretations of regulatory language are the key reason for the lack of rigorous clinical trial evidence to support (...)
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