Abstract
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) sometimes recruit
participants who are desperate to receive the experimental
treatment. This paper defends the practice against three
arguements that suggest it is unethical first, desperate
volunteers are not in equipoise. Second clinicians, entering
patients onto trials are disavowing their therapeutic
obligation to deliver the best treatment; they are following
trial protocols rather than delivering individualised care.
Research is not treatment; its ethical justification is different.
Consent is crucial. Third, desperate volunteers do not give
proper consent: effectively, they are coerced. This paper
responds by advocating a notion of equipoise based on
expert knowledge and widely shared values. Where such
collective, expert equipoise exists there is a prima facie
case for an RCT. Next the paper argues that trial entry does
not involve clinicians disavowing their therapeutic
obligation; individualised care based on insufficient
evidence is not in patients best interest. Finally, it argues
that where equipoise exists it is acceptable to limit access to
experimental agents; desperate volunteers are not coerced
because their desperation does not translate into a right to
receive what they desire.