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Risk, benefit, and social value in Covid-19 human challenge studies: pandemic decision making in historical context.
Rosenheck, Mabel.
  • Rosenheck M; Independent Scholar, 424 Morris Street, #2, 19148, PA, Philadelphia, USA. rosenheck@gmail.com.
Monash Bioeth Rev ; 40(2): 188-213, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1889096
ABSTRACT
During the Covid-19 pandemic, ethicists and researchers proposed human challenge studies as a way to speed development of a vaccine that could prevent disease and end the global public health crisis. The risks to healthy volunteers of being deliberately infected with a deadly and novel pathogen were not low, but the benefits could have been immense. This essay is a history of the three major efforts to set up a challenge model and run challenge studies in 2020 and 2021. The pharmaceutical company Johnson and Johnson, the National Institutes of Health in the United States, and a private-public partnership of industry, university, and government partners in Britain all undertook preparations. The United Kingdom's consortium began their Human Challenge Programme in March of 2021.Beyond documenting each effort, the essay puts these scientific and ethical debates in dialogue with the social, epidemiological, and institutional conditions of the pandemic as well as the commercial, intellectual, and political systems in which medical research and Covid-19 challenge studies operated. It shows how different institutions understood risk, benefit, and social value depending on their specific contexts. Ultimately the example of Covid-19 challenge studies highlights the constructedness of such assessments and reveals the utility of deconstructing them retrospectively so as to better understand the interplay of medical research and research ethics with larger social systems and historical contexts.
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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Pandemics / COVID-19 Type of study: Observational study / Prognostic study Topics: Vaccines Limits: Humans Country/Region as subject: North America Language: English Journal: Monash Bioeth Rev Journal subject: Ethics Year: 2022 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: S40592-022-00156-6

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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Pandemics / COVID-19 Type of study: Observational study / Prognostic study Topics: Vaccines Limits: Humans Country/Region as subject: North America Language: English Journal: Monash Bioeth Rev Journal subject: Ethics Year: 2022 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: S40592-022-00156-6