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Volumn 16, Issue 4, 1996, Pages 101-110
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The ethics of deception in biomedical research.
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Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
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Indexed keywords
ADULT;
ARTICLE;
BIOMEDICAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH;
BLOOD EXAMINATION;
CANADA;
ETHICS;
FEMALE;
HUMAN;
HUMAN EXPERIMENT;
HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS PREVALENCE;
HUMAN RELATION;
INFORMED CONSENT;
INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION;
LEGAL ASPECT;
MEDICAL ETHICS;
NEWBORN;
NEWBORN SCREENING;
PARENTAL CONSENT;
PATERNALISM;
PERSONAL AUTONOMY;
PREGNANCY;
PREGNANT WOMAN;
RESEARCH ETHICS;
RESEARCH SUBJECT;
BIOMEDICAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH;
ADULT;
CANADA;
DISCLOSURE;
ETHICAL REVIEW;
ETHICS;
ETHICS, MEDICAL;
ETHICS, RESEARCH;
FEMALE;
HEMATOLOGIC TESTS;
HIV SEROPREVALENCE;
HUMAN EXPERIMENTATION;
HUMANS;
INFANT, NEWBORN;
INFORMED CONSENT;
NEONATAL SCREENING;
PARENTAL CONSENT;
PATERNALISM;
PERSONAL AUTONOMY;
PREGNANCY;
PREGNANT WOMEN;
RESEARCH SUBJECTS;
RESEARCHER-SUBJECT RELATIONS;
TRUTH DISCLOSURE;
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EID: 0030132858
PISSN: 02268841
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: None Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (2)
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References (0)
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