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      Ethics of dead participants: policy recommendations for biobank research

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      Journal of Medical Ethics
      BMJ

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          Abstract

          Respecting people’s consent choices for use of their material and data is a cornerstone of biobank ethics. Participation in biobanks is characteristically based on broad consent that presupposes an ongoing possibility of informing and interacting with participants over time. The death of a participant means the end of any interaction, but usually not the end of participation. Research on causes of death makes biobank material from deceased participants extremely valuable. But as new research questions and methods develop over time, the question arises whether stored biobank material from deceased persons still can be used on the basis of their broad consent. In this paper, we discuss policies for postmortem use of biobank material, including consent options, proxy consent and criteria for limitation of types of use and duration of storage. We conclude that the interests of participants in biobank research are best served by asking at enrolment if and how the biobank material may be used after death. We state that the use of biobank material from deceased participants should be delimited both by their consent and by the prevailing broad consent choices of living participants.

          Biobanks also need to inform participants at enrolment about the duration of storage of biobank material or at minimum have procedures for deciding how long material will be stored for and for which purpose. For older collections, in the absence of such information or consent options, relevant authorities should decide.

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          Most cited references4

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          A template for broad consent in biobank research. Results and explanation of an evidence and consensus-based development process.

          Biobanks increasingly presume long-term storage of biomaterials and data that shall be used for future research projects which are today unspecified. Appropriate consent documents for sample donors must therefore explain the breadth of consent and other elements of the biobank governance framework. Recent reviews demonstrated high variability in what issues these documents mention or not and how the issues are explained. This might undermine the protection of sample donors, complicate networked biobank research, create research waste and impact on public trust.
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            Data storage and DNA banking for biomedical research: technical, social and ethical issues.

            (2003)
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              Biobanking and deceased persons

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Medical Ethics
                J Med Ethics
                BMJ
                0306-6800
                1473-4257
                September 25 2018
                October 2018
                October 2018
                June 19 2018
                : 44
                : 10
                : 695-699
                Article
                10.1136/medethics-2017-104241
                bef68e4d-d104-4b30-b2ba-5080afb0b23b
                © 2018
                History

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