Biomed Analysis: A cautious welcome for online trials
Online clinical trials hold promise for research but scientists should think hard before using them in poorer countries, says Priya Shetty.
19 June 2012 | EN
Here is a list of the latest articles
Online clinical trials hold promise for research but scientists should think hard before using them in poorer countries, says Priya Shetty.
19 June 2012 | EN
Quack science and illogical claims abound in Pakistan, says Pervez Hoodbhoy.
Source: Express Tribune
1 June 2012 | EN
Some Muslim countries' powerful financial incentives to make quick progress in research could backfire, cautions Athar Osama.
12 January 2012 | EN
Developing countries forging ahead with nanotechnology need regulation and research into local risk patterns, say Alok Dhawan and Vyom Sharma.
Scientists must collaborate with indigenous communities to rebuild trust and ensure shared benefits, says geneticist Vanessa M. Hayes.
Source: Science
10 May 2011 | EN
The current practice of keeping complexity out of scientific advice is misguided, inviting over-confidence and error, argues Andy Stirling.
Source: Nature
29 December 2010 | EN
A Nature editorial calls on the global academic community to support investigations into allegations of scientific plagiarism in Iran.
Source: Nature
Countries should measure themselves against a set of standards to assess the integrity of their research bases, says a Nature editorial.
Source: Nature
Disaster research can help future interventions, but urgency should never excuse exploitation of survivors, says Athula Sumathipala.
For its own international credibility, Indian science must be seen to deal with scientific misconduct, says N. Raghuram.
3 July 2008 | EN
Public-private partnership organisations have failed to include African researchers on an equal basis, say T. J. Tucker and M. W. Makgoba.
Source: Science
Africa should develop its own ethical review systems, not copy foreign arrangements, say Carl H. Coleman and Marie-Charlotte Bouësseau.
Source: Bioethics Forum
29 January 2007 | EN
Source: Slate.com
1 December 2005 | EN
Robert Grant and colleagues say that despite controversy surrounding trials of promising HIV preventive drugs, we must encourage such research rather than try to curb it.
Source: Science
UNESCO's declaration on bioethics and human rights is too weak to be of value, and could harm the world's poor if developing countries accept it, says Richard Ashcroft.
9 September 2005 | EN
Source: The Lancet
28 July 2005 | EN
Understanding science and its implications is a human right, argues Xiong Lei, in this perspective from China.
Treating research participants from vulnerable populations ethically means more than considering drugs' potential side-effects; researchers must also frame their work within a human rights context, argues Bebe Loff.
20 July 2005 | EN
Source: PLoS Medicine
20 July 2005 | EN