Ethical
Principles for Medical Research Involving Human
Subjects
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Adopted
by the 18th WMA General Assembly, Helsinki, Finland,
June 1964, and amended by the 29th WMA General Assembly,
Tokyo, Japan, October 1975
35th WMA General Assembly, Venice, Italy, October
1983
41st WMA General Assembly, Hong Kong, September
1989
48th WMA General Assembly, Somerset West, Republic
of South Africa, October 1996
and the 52nd WMA General Assembly, Edinburgh, Scotland,
October 2000
Note of Clarification on Paragraph 29 added by the
WMA General Assembly, Washington 2002
Note of Clarification on Paragraph 30 added by the
WMA General Assembly, Tokyo 2004
A. INTRODUCTION
1. The World Medical Association has developed the
Declaration of Helsinki as a statement of ethical
principles to provide guidance to physicians and
other participants in medical research involving
human subjects. Medical research involving human
subjects includes research on identifiable human
material or identifiable data.
2. It is the duty of the physician to promote and
safeguard the health of the people. The physician's
knowledge and conscience are dedicated to the fulfillment
of this duty.
3. The Declaration of Geneva of the World Medical
Association binds the physician with the words,
"The health of my patient will be my first
consideration," and the International Code
of Medical Ethics declares that, "A physician
shall act only in the patient's interest when providing
medical care which might have the effect of weakening
the physical and mental condition of the patient."
4. Medical progress is based on research which ultimately
must rest in part on experimentation involving human
subjects.
5. In medical research on human subjects, considerations
related to the well-being of the human subject should
take precedence over the interests of science and
society.
6. The primary purpose of medical research involving
human subjects is to improve prophylactic, diagnostic
and therapeutic procedures and the understanding
of the aetiology and pathogenesis of disease. Even
the best proven prophylactic, diagnostic, and therapeutic
methods must continuously be challenged through
research for their effectiveness, efficiency, accessibility
and quality.
7. In current medical practice and in medical research,
most prophylactic, diagnostic and therapeutic procedures
involve risks and burdens.
8. Medical research is subject to ethical standards
that promote respect for all human beings and protect
their health and rights. Some research populations
are vulnerable and need special protection. The
particular needs of the economically and medically
disadvantaged must be recognized. Special attention
is also required for those who cannot give or refuse
consent for themselves, for those who may be subject
to giving consent under duress, for those who will
not benefit personally from the research and for
those for whom the research is combined with care.
9. Research Investigators should be aware of the
ethical, legal and regulatory requirements for research
on human subjects in their own countries as well
as applicable international requirements. No national
ethical, legal or regulatory requirement should
be allowed to reduce or eliminate any of the protections
for human subjects set forth in this Declaration.
B.
BASIC PRINCIPLES FOR ALL MEDICAL RESEARCH
10. It is the duty of the physician in medical research
to protect the life, health, privacy, and dignity
of the human subject.
11. Medical research involving human subjects must
conform to generally accepted scientific principles,
be based on a thorough knowledge of the scientific
literature, other relevant sources of information,
and on adequate laboratory and, where appropriate,
animal experimentation.
12. Appropriate caution must be exercised in the
conduct of research which may affect the environment,
and the welfare of animals used for research must
be respected.
13. The design and performance of each experimental
procedure involving human subjects should be clearly
formulated in an experimental protocol. This protocol
should be submitted for consideration, comment,
guidance, and where appropriate, approval to a specially
appointed ethical review committee, which must be
independent of the investigator, the sponsor or
any other kind of undue influence. This independent
committee should be in conformity with the laws
and regulations of the country in which the research
experiment is performed. The committee has the right
to monitor ongoing trials. The researcher has the
obligation to provide monitoring information to
the committee, especially any serious adverse events.
The researcher should also submit to the committee,
for review, information regarding funding, sponsors,
institutional affiliations, other potential conflicts
of interest and incentives for subjects.
14. The research protocol should always contain
a statement of the ethical considerations involved
and should indicate that there is compliance with
the principles enunciated in this Declaration.
15. Medical research involving human subjects should
be conducted only by scientifically qualified persons
and under the supervision of a clinically competent
medical person. The responsibility for the human
subject must always rest with a medically qualified
person and never rest on the subject of the research,
even though the subject has given consent.
16. Every medical research project involving human
subjects should be preceded by careful assessment
of predictable risks and burdens in comparison with
foreseeable benefits to the subject or to others.
This does not preclude the participation of healthy
volunteers in medical research. The design of all
studies should be publicly available.
17. Physicians should abstain from engaging in research
projects involving human subjects unless they are
confident that the risks involved have been adequately
assessed and can be satisfactorily managed. Physicians
should cease any investigation if the risks are
found to outweigh the potential benefits or if there
is conclusive proof of positive and beneficial results.
18. Medical research involving human subjects should
only be conducted if the importance of the objective
outweighs the inherent risks and burdens to the
subject. This is especially important when the human
subjects are healthy volunteers.
19. Medical research is only justified if there
is a reasonable likelihood that the populations
in which the research is carried out stand to benefit
from the results of the research.
20. The subjects must be volunteers and informed
participants in the research project.
21. The right of research subjects to safeguard
their integrity must always be respected. Every
precaution should be taken to respect the privacy
of the subject, the confidentiality of the patient's
information and to minimize the impact of the study
on the subject's physical and mental integrity and
on the personality of the subject.
22. In any research on human beings, each potential
subject must be adequately informed of the aims,
methods, sources of funding, any possible conflicts
of interest, institutional affiliations of the researcher,
the anticipated benefits and potential risks of
the study and the discomfort it may entail. The
subject should be informed of the right to abstain
from participation in the study or to withdraw consent
to participate at any time without reprisal. After
ensuring that the subject has understood the information,
the physician should then obtain the subject's freely-given
informed consent, preferably in writing. If the
consent cannot be obtained in writing, the non-written
consent must be formally documented and witnessed.
23. When obtaining informed consent for the research
project the physician should be particularly cautious
if the subject is in a dependent relationship with
the physician or may consent under duress. In that
case the informed consent should be obtained by
a well-informed physician who is not engaged in
the investigation and who is completely independent
of this relationship.
24. For a research subject who is legally incompetent,
physically or mentally incapable of giving consent
or is a legally incompetent minor, the investigator
must obtain informed consent from the legally authorized
representative in accordance with applicable law.
These groups should not be included in research
unless the research is necessary to promote the
health of the population represented and this research
cannot instead be performed on legally competent
persons.
25. When a subject deemed legally incompetent, such
as a minor child, is able to give assent to decisions
about participation in research, the investigator
must obtain that assent in addition to the consent
of the legally authorized representative.
26. Research on individuals from whom it is not
possible to obtain consent, including proxy or advance
consent, should be done only if the physical/mental
condition that prevents obtaining informed consent
is a necessary characteristic of the research population.
The specific reasons for involving research subjects
with a condition that renders them unable to give
informed consent should be stated in the experimental
protocol for consideration and approval of the review
committee. The protocol should state that consent
to remain in the research should be obtained as
soon as possible from the individual or a legally
authorized surrogate.
27. Both authors and publishers have ethical obligations.
In publication of the results of research, the investigators
are obliged to preserve the accuracy of the results.
Negative as well as positive results should be published
or otherwise publicly available. Sources of funding,
institutional affiliations and any possible conflicts
of interest should be declared in the publication.
Reports of experimentation not in accordance with
the principles laid down in this Declaration should
not be accepted for publication.
C.
ADDITIONAL PRINCIPLES FOR MEDICAL RESEARCH COMBINED
WITH MEDICAL CARE
28. The physician may combine medical research with
medical care, only to the extent that the research
is justified by its potential prophylactic, diagnostic
or therapeutic value. When medical research is combined
with medical care, additional standards apply to
protect the patients who are research subjects.
29. The benefits, risks, burdens and effectiveness
of a new method should be tested against those of
the best current prophylactic, diagnostic, and therapeutic
methods. This does not exclude the use of placebo,
or no treatment, in studies where no proven prophylactic,
diagnostic or therapeutic method exists. See footnote
30. At the conclusion of the study, every patient
entered into the study should be assured of access
to the best proven prophylactic, diagnostic and
therapeutic methods identified by the study. See
footnote
31. The physician should fully inform the patient
which aspects of the care are related to the research.
The refusal of a patient to participate in a study
must never interfere with the patient-physician
relationship.
32. In the treatment of a patient, where proven
prophylactic, diagnostic and therapeutic methods
do not exist or have been ineffective, the physician,
with informed consent from the patient, must be
free to use unproven or new prophylactic, diagnostic
and therapeutic measures, if in the physician's
judgement it offers hope of saving life, re-establishing
health or alleviating suffering. Where possible,
these measures should be made the object of research,
designed to evaluate their safety and efficacy.
In all cases, new information should be recorded
and, where appropriate, published. The other relevant
guidelines of this Declaration should be followed.
Note:
Note of clarification on paragraph 29 of the WMA
Declaration of Helsinki
The WMA hereby reaffirms its position that extreme
care must be taken in making use of a placebo-controlled
trial and that in general this methodology should
only be used in the absence of existing proven therapy.
However, a placebo-controlled trial may be ethically
acceptable, even if proven therapy is available,
under the following circumstances:
- Where for compelling and scientifically sound
methodological reasons its use is necessary to determine
the efficacy or safety of a prophylactic, diagnostic
or therapeutic method; or
- Where a prophylactic, diagnostic or therapeutic
method is being investigated for a minor condition
and the patients who receive placebo will not be
subject to any additional risk of serious or irreversible
harm.
All other provisions of the Declaration of Helsinki
must be adhered to, especially the need for appropriate
ethical and scientific review.
Note:
Note of clarification on paragraph 30 of the WMA
Declaration of Helsinki
The WMA hereby reaffirms its position that it is
necessary during the study planning process to identify
post-trial access by study participants to prophylactic,
diagnostic and therapeutic procedures identified
as beneficial in the study or access to other appropriate
care. Post-trial access arrangements or other care
must be described in the study protocol so the ethical
review committee may consider such arrangements
during its review.
The
Declaration of Helsinki (Document 17.C) is an official
policy document of the World Medical Association,
the global representative body for physicians. It
was first adopted in 1964 (Helsinki, Finland) and
revised in 1975 (Tokyo, Japan), 1983 (Venice, Italy),
1989 (Hong Kong), 1996 (Somerset-West, South Africa)
and 2000 (Edinburgh, Scotland). Note of clarification
on Paragraph 29 added by the WMA General Assembly,
Washington 2002.
(9.10.2004)