![]() |
Volumn 26, Issue 5, 1996, Pages 30-33
|
The suppressed legacy of Nuremberg.
a
a
NONE
|
Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
|
Indexed keywords
ARTICLE;
BIOMEDICAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH;
DEATH AND EUTHANASIA;
DECISION MAKING;
FREEDOM;
HUMAN;
HUMAN EXPERIMENT;
HUMAN RELATION;
INFORMED CONSENT;
LEGAL ASPECT;
MEDICAL ETHICS;
MISCELLANEOUS NAMED GROUPS;
NUREMBERG CODE;
NUREMBERG TRIALS;
PATIENT ADVOCACY;
PATIENT PARTICIPATION;
PATIENT RIGHT;
PERSONAL AUTONOMY;
POLITICAL SYSTEM;
PROFESSIONAL MISCONDUCT;
PROFESSIONAL PATIENT RELATIONSHIP;
RESEARCH SUBJECT;
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY;
TRUST;
TWENTIETH CENTURY;
VULNERABLE POPULATION;
BIOMEDICAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH;
DEATH AND EUTHANASIA;
NUREMBERG CODE;
NUREMBERG TRIALS;
PROFESSIONAL PATIENT RELATIONSHIP;
TWENTIETH CENTURY;
DECISION MAKING;
ETHICS, MEDICAL;
FREEDOM;
HUMAN EXPERIMENTATION;
HUMANS;
INFORMED CONSENT;
NATIONAL SOCIALISM;
PATIENT ADVOCACY;
PATIENT PARTICIPATION;
PATIENT RIGHTS;
PERSONAL AUTONOMY;
PERSONS;
PROFESSIONAL MISCONDUCT;
RESEARCH SUBJECTS;
RESEARCHER-SUBJECT RELATIONS;
SOCIAL VALUES;
TRUST;
VULNERABLE POPULATIONS;
|
EID: 0030229723
PISSN: 00930334
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: 10.2307/3528468 Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (13)
|
References (0)
|