TY - BOOK ID - 6705482 TI - European neonatal research : consent, ethics committees and law AU - Mason, SU AU - Megone, Christopher PY - 2001 SN - 0754613011 9780754613015 PB - Aldershot: Ashgate, DB - UniCat KW - Neonatology KW - Infants KW - Informed consent (Medical law) KW - Medical ethics KW - Research KW - Moral and ethical aspects KW - Neonatal pediatrics KW - Biomedical ethics KW - Clinical ethics KW - Ethics, Medical KW - Health care ethics KW - Medical care KW - Medicine KW - Consent, Informed KW - Consent to treatment KW - Disclosure, Medical KW - Medical disclosure KW - Treatment, Consent to KW - Babies KW - Infancy KW - Perinatology KW - Newborn infants KW - Bioethics KW - Professional ethics KW - Nursing ethics KW - Social medicine KW - Consent (Law) KW - Medical personnel KW - Patient education KW - Involuntary treatment KW - Patient refusal of treatment KW - Children KW - Malpractice KW - Neonatology - Research - Moral and ethical aspects - Europe. KW - Infants - Research - Moral and ethical aspects - Europe. KW - Informed consent (Medical law) - Europe. KW - Medical ethics - Europe. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:6705482 AB - The Euricon Project, "Is obtaining informed consent for neonatal research an "elaborate ritual"? - A European Study" was a three-year European Union BioMed-funded study which commenced in 1996. The project partnership comprised a multidisciplinary team of neonatologists, ethicists, lawyers and a sociologist specialising in European medical issues. This volume brings together the various findings of the Euricon study. In the first section of the book, the contributors provide an introduction to the study and outline the ethical issues that impinge on the process of informed consent for neonatal research. The practical problems, encountered by both neonatologists and parents in a specific multicentre, neonatal trial, are outlined. The second section offers an analysis of European Research Ethics Committees, and their role in the ethical review of medical research protocols. Section Three provides a comparative analysis of the law governing informed consent in neonatal research within Europe, and Section Four looks at the process of obtaining informed consent. The final section consists of the consensus statement on the conduct of the informed consent process of the Euricon research project. This statement is derived both from the empirical work and from reflection and discussion amongst the partnership at the three colloquia of the project. Finally, and importantly, issues which were widely discussed, but about which no consensus was reached, are outlined. This volume brings together the findings of a Euricon project which commenced in 1996 and explored whether obtaining informed consent for neonatal research in Europe is necessary. The project partnership comprised a team of neonatologists, ethicists, lawyers and a sociologist in medical issues. ER -