Vol , Issue Date of Publication: July 01, 1997

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Conference Announcements


Public Responsibility in Medicine and Research has announced its schedule of meetings.

6 November 1997: Conference entitled Reviewing and revising the expedited categories of research. Among the topics for discussion are:

  1. expedited review of routine m-approval applications’
  2. disposition of growing number of adverse experience reports;
  3. expedited review of compassionate or treatment USC of FDA-regulated ‘test articles’.

7 December 1997: Applied Research Ethics National Association holds its annual human subject research conference on TUSKEGEE: Can past lessons guide researchers in the future? Among the topics for discussion are:

  1. the impending challenges for institutional review boards
  2. the Tuskegee syphilis study legacy
  3. managing continuing review and adverse event reports
  4. IRB liability issues
  5. regulatory updates from FDA and OPRR.

8-9 December 1997: Annual human subject research conference on Ethical research in an ethical society. Among the topics for discussion are:

  1. update on NIH/FDA guidelines for the inclusion of women and minorities and the new guidelines on the inclusion of children in clinical trials
  2. a review of the ‘headlines’ in human subject research and an analysis of what constitutes a research ‘scandal’
  3. the model informed consent form designed for use in obtaining tissue for research
  4. creative informed consent procedures.

For further information contact: Joan Rachlin, Executive Director, PRIM&R, 132 Boylston Street, Boston, MA 02116.

Fax: (617)423-l 185. c-mail: [email protected]

International Conference on Human rights, Bioethics and Health

11-l 3 September 1997, Paris, France.

Although broadly considered to be a fundamental human right, access to health care still raises many issues, notably as regards its implementation in practice. On the one hand the number of persons deprived of social protection is increasing, even in the industrialised countries. On the other hand, the emerging new biomedical technologies are influencing the control of vital human functions (notably in the fields of procreation, genetics and neuroscicnces). This has resulted in a challenge to human rights, encapsulated in the formula – ‘Towards grcatcr freedom, OR, towards the acceptance of greater risks’.

Sessions:
  1. Achieving solidarity in the light of economic constraints,
  2. IIealth and medicine in situations of crisis: Medicine in wartime, disaster medicine,
  3. The history of the right to health as a human right,
  4. Human rights and bioethics: Some innovative developments, (5) The protection of the vulnerable and the risks of the betrayal of medicine,
  5. Conceptual, legal and ethical aspects of health as a human right,
  6. Role and limits of ethical committees and
  7. Concluding session: Ethics and law in the development of public health policy in confirmity with human rights.

This conference is directed to persons involved in the practice of medicine ethics, health law, policy making in the public health sector, human rights and international cooperation. The official languages of the conference arc English and French, and simultaneous interpretation will be assured. Organised by: Council of International Organisations of Medical Sciences (CIOMS) and International Association of Law, Ethics and Science (IALES), For more information, write to: BYK Christian, Secretary General, CIOMS, 62 Rd. Port Royal, 75005, Paris, France. Fax: (+33) (l) 43 37 47 10

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