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The Antivaccine Heresy [Book Review]

Caplan, Arthur L.
ISI:000440250600013
ISSN: 0090-0036
CID: 3587852

How Should Clinicians Respond When Patients Are Influenced by Celebrities' Cancer Stories?

Yerramilli, Divya; Charrow, Alexandra; Caplan, Arthur
Despite the prodigious medical literature on cancer care, some patients rely on celebrity narratives as frameworks for understanding their experiences of cancer and as benchmarks for decision making. Regardless of whether these narratives are appropriate sources of health information for patients, it has been shown that celebrity narratives influence patterns of care. Three cases-John McCain, Angelina Jolie, and Jimmy Carter-are presented to illustrate how media coverage of cancer can have unforeseen consequences on individual patients exposed to these kinds of stories. For this reason, clinicians should become familiar with these narratives and comfortable with discussing how celebrity narratives can shape patients' views and decisions.
PMID: 30499437
ISSN: 2376-6980
CID: 3520132

Medical Crowdfunding for Scientifically Unsupported or Potentially Dangerous Treatments

Vox, Ford; Folkers, Kelly McBride; Turi, Angela; Caplan, Arthur L
PMID: 30357284
ISSN: 1538-3598
CID: 3384972

Author Accountability in Biomedical Research

Caplan, Arthur; Badylak, Stephen F; Caplan, Arnold I; Davies, Lindsay; Stromblad, Staffan; Weiss, Daniel; Le Blanc, Katarina
N/A.
PMID: 30351188
ISSN: 1557-8534
CID: 3386042

Ensuring Justice in Access to Investigational Neurological Drugs

Kearns, Lisa; Bateman-House, Alison; Caplan, Arthur
Patients who suffer from life-threatening illnesses or are stricken with conditions that could result in serious morbidity who have exhausted all appropriate treatments may choose to try, through the Food and Drug Administration's expanded access program, an investigational drug or device in development. The program has succeeded for decades in allowing patients to access potentially helpful but still experimental agents. Nevertheless, the administration of investigational drugs outside of clinical trials raises several ethical issues. Of particular concern are the validity of informed consent and the absence of a framework to ensure that experimental drugs are allocated justly and transparently. Although there are some safeguards to help protect the soundness of consent, little work to date has been done to guarantee that investigational medical products are allocated justly and transparently. We introduce a novel pilot project that seeks to address this issue.
PMID: 30321898
ISSN: 1098-9021
CID: 3369752

Science in the fight to uphold the rights of children

Caplan, Arthur L; Hotez, Peter J
The United States is the only major nation to not yet have ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC). Recently, there has been an erosion of the rights of children across America, Europe, and elsewhere, but through science, we may have an opportunity to counter some of this alarming trend. In the area of vaccines, the scientific community can raise its voice on the dangers that nonmedical exemptions and delays pose to children at risk for measles, influenza, and other childhood illnesses. Poverty places infants and children at high risk for illness and homelessness. Gun violence and gun-related accidents are killing on average four American children daily, and climate change is promoting global pediatric malnutrition. Increasing international, federal, and state support to seek innovative solutions to these and related issues is a moral imperative.
PMID: 30226835
ISSN: 1545-7885
CID: 3300472

Of Straws, Camels, Research Regulation, and IRBs

Friesen, Phoebe; Redman, Barbara; Caplan, Arthur
Institutional review boards (IRBs) have become beleaguered by a growth in responsibilities related to research oversight in the past several decades. A number of regulatory bodies have appeared in response to these novel and complex responsibilities, seeking to respond to among other issues, conflicts of interest, new technologies, and the potential misuse of research findings. Here, we examine several examples of these novel regulatory bodies as well as a number of concerns related to them that have been largely unacknowledged. Evidence suggests that there can be disharmony and conflicts between these regulatory bodies and IRBs, a lack of clarity with regard to their roles and responsibilities, as well as shortcomings within these entities that, at times, look a lot like the worries that have long been raised in relation to IRBs. We offer a brief discussion of how some of these concerns might be ameliorated, either through a significant restructuring of the system of research oversight, or perhaps through smaller changes to these regulatory bodies.
PMID: 30176736
ISSN: 2168-4804
CID: 3274642

Time-limited trial of intensive care treatment: an overview of current literature

Vink, Eva E; Azoulay, Elie; Caplan, Arthur; Kompanje, Erwin J O; Bakker, Jan
In critically ill patients, it is frequently challenging to identify who will benefit from admission to the intensive care unit and life-sustaining interventions when the chances of a meaningful outcome are unclear. In addition, the acute illness not only affects the patients but also family members or surrogates who often are overwhelmed and unable to make thoughtful decisions. In these circumstances, a time-limited trial (TLT) of intensive care treatment can be helpful. A TLT is an agreement to initiate all necessary treatments or treatments with clearly delineated limitations for a certain period of time to gain a more realistic understanding of the patient's chances of a meaningful recovery or to ascertain the patient's wishes and values. In this article, we discuss current research on different aspects of TLTs in the intensive care unit. We propose how and when to use TLTs, discuss how much time should be taken for a TLT, give an overview of the potential impact of TLTs on healthcare resources, describe ethical challenges concerning TLTs, and discuss how to evaluate a TLT.
PMID: 30136140
ISSN: 1432-1238
CID: 3246462

"A Little ELF, Please?" The Electronic Long-Form COI Disclosure Statement (ELFCOI)

Kearns, Lisa; Caplan, Arthur
PMID: 30040552
ISSN: 1536-0075
CID: 3216042

Fair, just and compassionate: A pilot for making allocation decisions for patients requesting experimental drugs outside of clinical trials

Caplan, Arthur L; Teagarden, J Russell; Kearns, Lisa; Bateman-House, Alison S; Mitchell, Edith; Arawi, Thalia; Upshur, Ross; Singh, Ilina; Rozynska, Joanna; Cwik, Valerie; Gardner, Sharon L
Patients have received experimental pharmaceuticals outside of clinical trials for decades. There are no industry-wide best practices, and many companies that have granted compassionate use, or 'preapproval', access to their investigational products have done so without fanfare and without divulging the process or grounds on which decisions were made. The number of compassionate use requests has increased over time. Driving the demand are new treatments for serious unmet medical needs; patient advocacy groups pressing for access to emerging treatments; internet platforms enabling broad awareness of compelling cases or novel drugs and a lack of trust among some that the pharmaceutical industry and/or the FDA have patients' best interests in mind. High-profile cases in the media have highlighted the gap between patient expectations for compassionate use and company utilisation of fair processes to adjudicate requests. With many pharmaceutical manufacturers, patient groups, healthcare providers and policy analysts unhappy with the inequities of the status quo, fairer and more ethical management of compassionate use requests was needed. This paper reports on a novel collaboration between a pharmaceutical company and an academic medical ethics department that led to the formation of the Compassionate Use Advisory Committee (CompAC). Comprising medical experts, bioethicists and patient representatives, CompAC established an ethical framework for the allocation of a scarce investigational oncology agent to single patients requesting non-trial access. This is the first account of how the committee was formed and how it built an ethical framework and put it into practice.
PMID: 29982174
ISSN: 1473-4257
CID: 3191732