Salako S E
School of Law, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Med Law. 2006 Jun;25(2):341-54.
The first detailed regulations about nontherapeutic research were promulgated by the Prussian Government in 1900. In 1947, the Nuremberg Code was decreed. Since then, the Declaration of Helsinki (DOH) was adopted in 1964 and has been revised five times. The object of this article is to evaluate the 2000 Revision of the DOH and discuss three problems of concern. These problems are: (1) If, unlike its predecessors, the DOH (2000) has recast itself as a minimum set of international standards 'binding' on physicians worldwide, from where does it derive its authority? (2) The wording of the DOH is incongruent with the underlying ethical principles. (3) The projection of the DOH into the realms of social justice raises the issue of human dignity. Finally, the feasibility or desirability of a theory of justice privileging human dignity as one of its guiding principles and the future of the DOH are examined.
普鲁士政府于1900年颁布了首部关于非治疗性研究的详细规定。1947年,《纽伦堡法典》颁布。此后,《赫尔辛基宣言》于1964年通过,并历经五次修订。本文旨在评估《赫尔辛基宣言》2000年修订版,并探讨三个相关问题。这些问题是:(1)与之前的版本不同,《赫尔辛基宣言》(2000年)将自身重塑为一套对全球医生具有“约束力”的最低国际标准,其权威源自何处?(2)《赫尔辛基宣言》的措辞与潜在的伦理原则不一致。(3)将《赫尔辛基宣言》延伸至社会正义领域引发了人类尊严问题。最后,审视了以人类尊严为指导原则之一的正义理论的可行性或可取性以及《赫尔辛基宣言》的未来。