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1.
Science ; 381(6664): 1267-1268, 2023 09 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37733845

ABSTRACT

Orazio Schillaci denies responsibility for duplicated images in eight papers he co-authored between 2018 and 2022.


Subject(s)
Nuclear Medicine , Scientific Misconduct , Nuclear Medicine/ethics , Italy
2.
Ann ICRP ; 49(1_suppl): 143-153, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32777956

ABSTRACT

Whereas scientific evidence is the basis for recommendations and guidance on radiological protection, professional ethics is critically important and should always guide professional behaviour. The International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) established Task Group 109 to advise medical professionals, patients, families, carers, the public, and authorities about the ethical aspects of radiological protection of patients in the diagnostic and therapeutic use of radiation in medicine. Occupational exposures and research-related exposures are not within the scope of this task group. Task Group 109 will produce a report that will be available to the different interested parties for consultation before publication. Presently, the report is at the stage of a working document that has benefitted from an international workshop organised on the topic by the World Health Organization. It presents the history of ethics in medicine in ICRP, and explains why this subject is important, and the benefits it can bring to the standard biomedical ethics. As risk is an essential part in decision-making and communication, a summary is included on what is known about the dose-effect relationship, with emphasis on the associated uncertainties. Once this theoretical framework has been presented, the report becomes resolutely more practical. First, it proposes an evaluation method to analyse specific situations from an ethical point of view. This method allows stakeholders to review a set of six ethical values and provides hints on how they could be balanced. Next, various situations (e.g. pregnancy, elderly, paediatric, end of life) are considered in two steps: first within a realistic, ethically challenging scenario on which the evaluation method is applied; and second within a more general context. Scenarios are presented and discussed with attention to specific patient circumstances, and on how and which reflections on ethical values can be of help in the decision-making process. Finally, two important related aspects are considered: how should we communicate with patients, family, and other stakeholders; and how should we incorporate ethics into the education and training of medical professionals?


Subject(s)
Guidelines as Topic , Nuclear Medicine/ethics , Radiation Exposure/prevention & control , Radiation Protection/standards , Humans , International Agencies
7.
Rev. cuba. hematol. inmunol. hemoter ; 30(4): 319-331, oct.-dic. 2014.
Article in Spanish | CUMED | ID: cum-59532

ABSTRACT

El campo de utilización cada vez más amplio de las sustancias radiactivas en la medicina exige el manejo y la aplicación de los principios de la ética en una relación muy estrecha con la protección radiológica (PR). Existe una necesidad insoslayable de llevar la perspectiva de la ética en el uso de las radiaciones ionizantes y de la PR del paciente a la práctica de la Medicina Nuclear en Hematología (MNH). Esto no debe asumirse como un proceso de simple adopción, sino como la aplicación creativa de sus principios. Será de gran utilidad continuar incluyendo en la docencia que se imparte a los profesionales de las diversas especialidades que emplean la medicina nuclear como herramienta diagnóstica o terapéutica, una formación científica basada en los principios de la ética sumados a elementos de la PR. El colectivo multidisciplinario dedicado a la MNH tiene una responsabilidad de índole moral y ética en la garantía del uso adecuado de las sustancias radiactivas en la técnica médica y el desarrollo científico de la especialidad. La siguiente revisión del tema pretende contribuir al fomento de principios éticos en los especialistas de hematología durante su quehacer diario. Con la aplicación de la ética en el contexto de la MNH, perfeccionaremos la gestión de PR en el manejo de los pacientes, contribuiremos a la mejor atención a estos y elevaremos la calidad de nuestro trabajo(AU)


The increasingly width of the field of radioactive substances use in medicine demands the managing and the application of ethics principles in a very close relation to radiological protection. There is an unavoidable need to take ethics perspective in the use of ionizing radiations and the radiological protection of the patient to the practice of Nuclear Medicine in Hematology (NMH). This must not be assumed as a process of simple adoption, but as the creative application of his principles. It will be highly useful to continue including in the teaching programs aimed to professionals who use nuclear medicine as a diagnostic or therapeutic tool, a scientific formation based on the ethics principles including the elements of radiological protection. The multidisciplinary group dedicated to NMH has a moral and ethical responsibility to guarantee the appropriate use of radioactive substances in the medical technology and scientific development of this specialty. The following review on the subject wishes to contribute to the promotion of ethical principles in hematology specialists during their daily work. With the application of ethics in the context of NMH, we will also improve the radiological protection of our patients which will contribute to their best care and will increase the quality of our work(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Nuclear Medicine/ethics , Hematology/education , Hematology/ethics , Radiation Protection/methods , Ethics, Medical/education
8.
Rev. cuba. hematol. inmunol. hemoter ; 30(4): 319-331, oct.-dic. 2014.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-735293

ABSTRACT

El campo de utilización cada vez más amplio de las sustancias radiactivas en la medicina exige el manejo y la aplicación de los principios de la ética en una relación muy estrecha con la protección radiológica (PR). Existe una necesidad insoslayable de llevar la perspectiva de la ética en el uso de las radiaciones ionizantes y de la PR del paciente a la práctica de la Medicina Nuclear en Hematología (MNH). Esto no debe asumirse como un proceso de simple adopción, sino como la aplicación creativa de sus principios. Será de gran utilidad continuar incluyendo en la docencia que se imparte a los profesionales de las diversas especialidades que emplean la medicina nuclear como herramienta diagnóstica o terapéutica, una formación científica basada en los principios de la ética sumados a elementos de la PR. El colectivo multidisciplinario dedicado a la MNH tiene una responsabilidad de índole moral y ética en la garantía del uso adecuado de las sustancias radiactivas en la técnica médica y el desarrollo científico de la especialidad. La siguiente revisión del tema pretende contribuir al fomento de principios éticos en los especialistas de hematología durante su quehacer diario. Con la aplicación de la ética en el contexto de la MNH, perfeccionaremos la gestión de PR en el manejo de los pacientes, contribuiremos a la mejor atención a estos y elevaremos la calidad de nuestro trabajo...


The increasingly width of the field of radioactive substances use in medicine demands the managing and the application of ethics principles in a very close relation to radiological protection. There is an unavoidable need to take ethics perspective in the use of ionizing radiations and the radiological protection of the patient to the practice of Nuclear Medicine in Hematology (NMH). This must not be assumed as a process of simple adoption, but as the creative application of his principles. It will be highly useful to continue including in the teaching programs aimed to professionals who use nuclear medicine as a diagnostic or therapeutic tool, a scientific formation based on the ethics principles including the elements of radiological protection. The multidisciplinary group dedicated to NMH has a moral and ethical responsibility to guarantee the appropriate use of radioactive substances in the medical technology and scientific development of this specialty. The following review on the subject wishes to contribute to the promotion of ethical principles in hematology specialists during their daily work. With the application of ethics in the context of NMH, we will also improve the radiological protection of our patients which will contribute to their best care and will increase the quality of our work...


Subject(s)
Humans , Hematology/education , Hematology/ethics , Nuclear Medicine/ethics , Radiation Protection/methods , Ethics, Medical/education
13.
J Nucl Med Technol ; 39(1): 1-4, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21321246

ABSTRACT

In the nuclear medicine setting, the task of obtaining informed consent for procedures that require it is frequently left to the nuclear medicine technologist. Unfortunately, a patient's signature on a consent form does not mean the patient has given informed consent, or what legal scholars call valid consent. On completion of this scholarly bioethics article, the reader will understand the troubled history that led to informed consent as social and regulatory policy. Additionally, the reader will discover the meaning of "informed consent," which includes 3 critical components: disclosure, decision-making capacity, and voluntariness. Finally, this article will discuss which nuclear medicine procedures require informed consent, how to assess whether patients have given informed consent, what to do when the patient refuses a procedure, and what to do when informed consent is unachievable.


Subject(s)
Informed Consent , Nuclear Medicine , Decision Making , Disclosure , Guidelines as Topic , Humans , Informed Consent/ethics , Mental Competency , Nuclear Medicine/ethics , Nuclear Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence
14.
J Nucl Med Technol ; 38(3): 117-20, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20807853

ABSTRACT

In recent years, shortages of radioisotopes that cannot be stockpiled have created a scenario in which they may be considered, periodically, a scarce medical resource. This discussion focuses on the just allocation of medical radioisotopes and presents the dominant ethical frameworks for rationing and priority setting in the patient populations most affected. Priority setting is necessary when demand for a scarce resource exceeds supply. On completion of this article, the reader will be able to describe the origins of rationing and priority setting in medicine, as well as ethically sound frameworks for rationing. Finally, the process for priority setting and the need for transparency of this process in the nuclear medicine setting are outlined.


Subject(s)
Health Care Rationing/ethics , Radioisotopes/supply & distribution , Health Care Rationing/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Nuclear Medicine/ethics
16.
Nucl Med Commun ; 31(6): 477-81, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20195185

ABSTRACT

Recent years have seen huge advances in medicine and the science of medicine. Nuclear medicine has been no exception and there has been rapid acceptance of new concepts, new technologies and newer ways of working. Ethical principles have been traditionally considered as generic skills applicable to wide groups of scientists and doctors, with only token refinement at specialty level. Specialist bodies across the world representing wide groups of practitioners frequently have subgroups dealing exclusively with ethical issues. It could easily be argued that the basic principles of ethical practice adopted by specialist bodies closest to nuclear medicine practice, such as radiology and oncology, will also be applicable to nuclear medicine and that time and effort need not be spent on specifying a separate code for nuclear medicine. It could also be argued that nuclear medicine is an independent specialty and some (if not most) practitioners will not be aware of the guidelines adopted by other specialist societies, and that there is a need for re-iteration of ethical principles at the specialty level and on a worldwide scale.In this article we would like to present a brief history of medical ethics, discuss some of the advances in nuclear medicine and their associated ethical aspects, as well as list a framework of principles for consideration, should a specialist body deem it suitable to establish a 'code of ethics' for nuclear medicine.


Subject(s)
Codes of Ethics , Nuclear Medicine/ethics , Ethics, Research , Radiology/ethics , Societies, Scientific/ethics , United States
18.
Med Confl Surviv ; 23(4): 267-81, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17987979

ABSTRACT

Abolishing the threat of nuclear war requires the outlawing of nuclear weapons and dismantling current nuclear weapon stockpiles, but also depends on eliminating access to fissile material (nuclear weapon fuel). The near-universal use of weapons-grade, highly enriched uranium (HEU) to produce radiopharmaceuticals is a significant proliferation hazard. Health professionals have a strategic opportunity and obligation to progress the elimination of medically-related commerce in HEU, closing one of the most vulnerable pathways to the much-feared 'terrorist bomb'.


Subject(s)
International Cooperation , Nuclear Medicine/ethics , Nuclear Warfare/prevention & control , Nuclear Weapons/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Policy , Radiopharmaceuticals , Social Responsibility , Codes of Ethics , Humans , Moral Obligations , Nuclear Medicine/education , Nuclear Reactors , Nuclear Warfare/ethics , Nuclear Weapons/ethics , Physician's Role , Radioisotopes/supply & distribution , Radionuclide Generators , Radiopharmaceuticals/supply & distribution , Terrorism/prevention & control , Uranium Compounds/supply & distribution
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