The Belmont principle of beneficence requires that:
Risks are managed so that they are no more than minimal.
Subjects derive individual benefit from study participation.
question 2
Potential benefits justify the risks of harm.
The study makes a significant contribution to generalizable knowledge.
Which of the following is an example of how the principle of beneficence is applied to a study involving human subjects?
Ensuring that subjects understand that participation is voluntary.
Providing detailed information about the study to potential subjects.
question 3
Ensuring that the selection of subjects is fair.
Ensuring that risks are reasonable in relationship to anticipated benefits.
question 4
According to the Belmont Report, the moral requirement that there be fair outcomes in the selection of research subjects, expresses the principle of:
Beneficence.
Justice.
Respect for persons.
Question 5
Which of the following studies is linked most directly to the establishment of the National Research Act in 1974 and ultimately to the Belmont Report and Federal regulations for human subject protection?
Tearoom Trade Study (Humphreys).
Stanford Prison Experiment (Zimbardo)
.The Harvard T3 study
.The Public Health Service Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male.
Question 1
The researcher’s failure to protect research subjects from deductive disclosure is the primary ethical violation in which of the following studies?
Zimbardo’s “Stanford Prison Experiment”
Harvard "Tastes, Ties, and Time (T3)" study (2006-2009)” study
The Tuskegee studies
Milgram’s “Obedience to Authority” study