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首页> 外文期刊>The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene >Doctors and vampires in sub-Saharan Africa: ethical challenges in clinical trial research.
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Doctors and vampires in sub-Saharan Africa: ethical challenges in clinical trial research.

机译:撒哈拉以南非洲地区的医生和吸血鬼:临床试验研究中的伦理挑战。

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摘要

Collecting blood samples from individuals recruited into clinical research projects in sub-Saharan Africa can be challenging. Strikingly, one of the reasons for participant reticence is the occurrence of local rumors surrounding "blood stealing" or "blood selling." Such fears can potentially have dire effects on the success of research projects--for example, high dropout rates that would invalidate the trial's results--and have ethical implications related to cultural sensitivity and informed consent. Though commonly considered as a manifestation of the local population's ignorance, these rumors represent a social diagnosis and a logical attempt to make sense of sickness and health. Born from historical antecedents, they reflect implicit contemporary structural inequalities and the social distance between communities and public health institutions. We aim at illustrating the underlying logic governing patients' fear and argue that the management of these beliefs should become an intrinsic component of clinical research.
机译:从在撒哈拉以南非洲的临床研究项目中招募的个体收集血液样本可能具有挑战性。令人惊讶的是,参与者保持沉默的原因之一是围绕“窃血”或“卖血”的当地谣言的出现。这种担忧可能会对研究项目的成功产生可怕的影响,例如高辍学率会使该研究的结果无效,并可能与文化敏感性和知情同意有关。尽管这些谣言通常被认为是当地居民无知的一种表现,但它们代表了一种社会诊断和一种合理的尝试,使人们感到疾病和健康。它们源于历史的先例,反映了隐式的当代结构性不平等以及社区与公共卫生机构之间的社会距离。我们旨在说明控制患者恐惧的基本逻辑,并认为对这些信念的管理应成为临床研究的内在组成部分。

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