Without well-conducted medical research with children, our understanding of childhood disorders and evidence base for treatments will remain limited. The benefits of research can be seen in areas such as childhood leukemia, but overall, health research with children lags behind that with adults. In everyday practice, doctors still need to prescribe medicines that are often only tested in adults. Despite this, researchers and parents are worried about asking children to take part in research because of ethical and practical concerns.
Following a two year inquiry, which has heard from hundreds of children and parents, the Nuffield Council on Bioethics is publishing its report, ‘Children and clinical research: ethical issues’.
Members of the report’s working party came to the SMC to discuss things including:
Speakers:
Prof. Bobbie Farsides, Chair of the Working Party and Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics at Brighton and Sussex Medical School
Dr Helen Sammons, Member of the Working Party, General Paediatrician at Derbyshire Children’s Hospital and Associate Professor of Child Health at the University of Nottingham
Prof. Bridget Young, Member of the Working Party and Professor of Psychology at the University of Liverpool
Ms Katharine Wright, Assistant Director of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics