The Choice to Become a Research Subject: A First-Person Perspective

Rebecca Dresser photo

Patients with serious illnesses are often invited to participate in clinical trials. After being diagnosed with advanced cancer, I became one of those patients. I had to choose between two options: a treatment regimen my doctors had recommended, or a trial evaluating different treatments for my disease. As someone who had taught and written about research ethics, and a long-time member of an Institutional Review Board, I was in some ways better prepared than many patients are to make this choice. And I knew about the important health benefits that come from research, as well as the arguments that patients have a duty to participate in research. Nevertheless, I decided not to enroll in the trial. Was this a defensible choice, or did I have a responsibility to contribute to a study that could help future patients in my situation?
Rebecca Dresser, JD, is a Professor of Law at Washington University in St. Louis.
Recorded March 22, 2017



To turn on closed captions for this video, click the CC icon in the video player and select English.

 

Watch on MSU MediaSpace

Back to List