• Using three different contexts (longitudinal studies, clinical trials, and newborn screening), we argue that distinctions should be made between the risks and benefits involved in recontacting for consent before determining the potential duties of researchers. (thehastingscenter.org)
  • For studies using previously collected tissues, researchers should attempt recontact and reconsent for research aims or methods beyond the scope of the original consent. (johnshopkins.edu)
  • This paper explores the issue of whether, to satisfy the ethical and legal norms of consent for research, participants in pediatric studies who attain the age of majority after their parents or guardians enrolled them in a study should be "recontacted" to obtain their consent to remain in the study. (thehastingscenter.org)
  • An obligation to recontact should always be balanced with the feasibility and cost of such efforts in each particular research context and with consideration for the existence or lack of an ongoing relationship with the participant. (thehastingscenter.org)
  • The term "duty to recontact" refers to the possible ethical and/or legal obligation of genetics service providers (GSPs) to recontact former patients about advances in research that might be relevant to them. (lookformedical.com)
  • There also was a lack of consensus about the possible benefits and burdens of recontacting patients and about various alternative methods of informing patients about research advances. (lookformedical.com)
  • Many favor allowing research beyond the scope of the original consent to proceed if recontact is impossible. (johnshopkins.edu)
  • Implications exist for current multidisciplinary care of wounded active duty and veteran service members, and future research should determine whether multimorbidity denotes distinct post-blast injury syndromes. (biomedcentral.com)
  • The workshop discussed the scope of the duty and standard of care arising in research and in clinical care, and the impact that introducing WGS and WES might have. (phgfoundation.org)
  • However, in the absence of broad initial consent, when recontact is impossible, a case-by-case decision must be made regarding a proposal's potential benefits and harms. (johnshopkins.edu)
  • In November of 2006, Para-Ordnance unveiled its Carry 9 LDA, designed from the ground up for concealed carry by undercover or off-duty officers. (policemag.com)
  • The agency's statewide span and numbers of officers on duty at any given hour makes them the largest on-duty, publically available law enforcement agency in the state. (officer.com)
  • Respondents were divided about whether recontacting patients should be the standard of care: 46% answered yes, 43% answered no, and 11% did not know. (lookformedical.com)
  • There was strong support for recontact and reconsent when possible and for the concept of broad consent at the time of tissue collection. (johnshopkins.edu)
  • Finally: can a doctor be expected to recontact the patient if new scientific knowledge means that data obtained from past WGA may be viewed in a new light? (nature.com)
  • Analysis of qualitative data suggested that most respondents consider recontacting patients an ethically desirable, but not feasible, goal. (lookformedical.com)
  • The flight under investigation was the third of the flight crew's shared duty period - they had previously flown a London Stansted - Turin rotation. (skybrary.aero)
  • I have t tops on my download free cheats call of duty modern warfare 2 and the wife has a sunroof in the and there is no comparison between the two, t tops are much better IMO. (tougen-corp.jp)
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  • The Responsibility to Recontact Research Participants after Reinterpretation of Genetic and Genomic Research Results. (nih.gov)
  • Any laboratory policy to actively reinterpret (specific sets of) classifications will confront the clinician with the question whether the person tested should be recontacted on a reinterpretation of previously reported results. (bmj.com)
  • Duty to Recontact" addresses providers' obligations to patients who have undergone previous genetic testing, given the growing complexities of genetic/genomic medicine and the potential for new findings in old tests. (mayoclinic.org)
  • When and how patients should be recontacted after new genetic information becomes available has been investigated extensively. (biomedcentral.com)
  • As others have pointed out, recontacting in general comes with challenges, since patients may not want to be recontacted or have forgotten about their genetic test. (bmj.com)
  • 1 They place these duties with laboratories, acknowledging that they are setting aside any responsibilities that might arise for clinicians. (bmj.com)
  • An interim assessment 1½ years after the baseline examination would do double duty as an opportunity to collect valuable supplemental data and as an opportunity to test our ability to trace the baseline sample for follow-up. (nih.gov)
  • While Gabriel Watts and Ainsley Newson argue that diagnostic laboratories do not have a general duty to routinely reinterpret genomic variant classifications, they do formulate several restricted duties to actively reinterpret specific types of classifications. (bmj.com)
  • The relevant public tasks are section 149 (public sector equality duty) and section 1 (the fairer Scotland duty) of the Equality Act 2010. (gov.scot)
  • Obligación ética y/o legal de cualquier investigador o proveedor de servicios sanitarios, de comunicar con antiguos pacientes o individuos objeto de una investigación, en cuanto a los avances en materia de tratamiento u otras pruebas diagnósticas efectuadas con anterioridad, o sobre nuevas propuestas de utilización de muestras de sangre o de tejidos obtenidas en el pasado para otros fines. (bvsalud.org)