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      Making risk-benefit assessments of medical research protocols.

      The Journal of law, medicine & ethics : a journal of the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics
      Biomedical Research, ethics, Clinical Protocols, Decision Making, Ethics Committees, Research, Ethics, Medical, Ethics, Research, Human Experimentation, Humans, Research Subjects, psychology, Risk Assessment

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          Abstract

          It is commonly assumed that medical experiments are ethical only if they have favorable "risk-benefit ratios". In this paper it is argued that "risk-benefit ratios" often cannot be calculated, even roughly; and that even if they could, ethical experiments don't need to have favorable "risk-benefit ratios". In addition, a new method of assessing an experiment's risk and benefits is proposed-a method grounded in the principles of liberal government.

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