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Moral and Ethical Imperatives of Health Care Technologies: Scientific, legal and socioeconomic perspectives on use and misuse - Conference - Indien

Date: 06.12.2007, 09:45h to 08.12.2007, 10:30h
Location: NIMHANS Convention Centre National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences Bangalore, Karnataka India
Bangalore, Karnataka
Indien
Keywords: Stem cell research - Ethics committees - Eugenics/Enhancement - Reproduction medicine/IVF - Genetic testing/counselling - Genetic research/engineering - Health care system/Health policy - Medical ethics - Organ/tissue transplantation - Pharmaceutics/drugs
Details: The Indian Journal of Medical Ethics (IJME) is a specialised, peer-reviewed and indexed bioethics journal that has been published every quarter since 1993. It established a broad, independent, participatory and national bioethics platform by holding the first National Bioethics Conference (NBC) in November 2005 in Mumbai, in collaboration with 20 Indian institutions. The NBC brings together, on one platform, organisations and individuals engaged in clinical practice as well as research, education and activism in a variety of fields, including biomedicine, public health, social sciences, humanities and law. The second NBC will be held on the 6, 7 and 8 December 2007 CONFERENCE THEME AND SUB-THEMES Developments in technology have been crucial in shaping health care all over the world. In view of the importance of health care technologies, and the social, economic, legal and moral dimensions that shape their development, use and misuse, this will be the theme of the second NBC 2007. The Conference aims to facilitate comprehensive debates and dialogues on health care technologies in the contexts of clinical practice, research, and public health and policy. Sub-theme: Technologies in medical practice Medical technologies dominate present-day clinical practice. While they are essential for quality of care they also affect the costs of health care, people?s access to care, and the relationship between the practitioners and manufacturers of these technologies. A number of ethical issues have arisen in the use of technologies to prolong life, such as organ transplantation; technologies for artificial reproduction which has eugenic possibilities; those for genetic screening, stem cell therapy, and so on. Sub-theme: Research on health care technologies Research on health care technologies has been a hotly debated subject in bioethics. This is particularly so in fields such as vaccine and drug development, genomics, artificial reproduction and stem cell research. The explosion of research activity has led to the development of new arrangements for conducting health research in different parts of the world. The growth of contract research organisations and the outsourcing of trials have raised several questions about research oversight and mechanisms for demanding accountability from dispersed and often unrelated stakeholders. Discussions on this sub-theme also include priority setting for research; the participation (or exclusion) of vulnerable groups; benefits and undue inducements; risk-benefit analysis; the quality of informed consent; injury compensation; standard of care; post-trial benefits; patents and intellectual property rights; and the competence and functioning of Institutional Ethics Committees. Sub-theme: Health care technologies, public health and policies Any technology, when used on a wide scale, has important consequences for society. This is particularly evident in the case of food and agricultural technology. Large numbers of people all over the world still suffer from malnutrition. Another example of the profound impact of technology on human society is in the development and deployment of vaccines. While technology has vastly expanded the range of health care options, it has also led to a massive increase in the cost of health care. Prohibitive costs have made access to health care difficult for many and led to indebtedness and further exacerbation of poverty. Paradoxically, the growth of medical technology has levelled international barriers, encouraging medical tourism. The superimposition of a highly modernised health care system on societies where primary care remains a pressing need is fraught with ethical dilemmas. Ethical issues also emerge at the intersections of policies on trade and health. For example, intellectual property rights, compulsory licensing, and international trade agreements have had important implications for drug pricing and access in developing countries. The balancing of economic and health concerns merits close attention.
Organizer: Indian Journal of Medical Ethics
Contact: Mr. Abraham Thomas
Address:
C/O IIMB-Samata Project #42, 1st Floor, Muniga Layout Banaswadi Main Rd Bangalore 560 033 India
Tel: +91 - 80 - 25 80 25 63
Fax: +91 - 80 - 25 80 25 63
Email: nbc.ijme@gmail.com
Webpage: http://ijme.in/2nbcbrochure.pdf

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