Autonomy, Humane Medicine, and Research Ethics: An East Asian Perspective

In Michael C. Brannigan (ed.), Cross-Cultural Biotechnology: A Reader. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 127-137 (2004)
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Abstract

In Chinese Confucian medical ethics, the principle of autonomy has not been recognized. Instead, the basic values of medical practice are compassion and humaneness. Patient autonomy however lies at the foundation of Western medical ethics in general and research ethics in particular. In the modern world of biotechnology, what happens when medical research is carried out in an East Asian society? Should the society adopt principles of Western medical ethics? Or can resources to ensure ethical research be found in Confucian ethics? I consider answers to these questions in the context of a recent case of unethical research in Singapore.

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David K. Chan
University of Alabama, Birmingham

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