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Critical Reviews™ in Biomedical Engineering

Publication de 6  numéros par an

ISSN Imprimer: 0278-940X

ISSN En ligne: 1943-619X

SJR: 0.262 SNIP: 0.372 CiteScore™:: 2.2 H-Index: 56

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Ethical Considerations for Biomedical Scientists and Engineers: Issues for the Rank and File

Volume 28, Numéro 3&4, 2000, pp. 517-521
DOI: 10.1615/CritRevBiomedEng.v28.i34.280
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RÉSUMÉ

Biomedical science and engineering is inextricably linked with the fields of medicine and surgery. Yet, while physicians and surgeons, nurses, and other medical professionals receive instruction in ethics during their training and must abide by certain codes of ethics during their practice, those engaged in biomedical science and engineering typically receive no formal training in ethics. In fact, the little contact that many biomedical science and engineering professionals have with ethics occurs either when they participate in government-funded research or submit articles for publication in certain journals. Thus, there is a need for biomedical scientists and engineers as a group to become more aware of ethics.
Moreover, recent advances in biomedical technology and the ever-increasing use of new devices virtually guarantee that biomedical science and engineering will become even more important in the future. Although they are rarely in direct contact with patients, biomedical scientists and engineers must become aware of ethics in order to be able to deal with the complex ethical issues that arise from our society's increasing reliance on biomedical technology.
In this brief communication, the need for ethical awareness among workers in biomedical science and engineering is discussed in terms of certain conflicts that arise in the workaday world of the biomedical scientist in a complex, modern society. It is also recognized that inasmuch as workers in the many branches of bioengineering are not regulated like their counterparts in medicine and surgery, perhaps academic institutions and professional societies are best equipped to heighten ethical awareness among workers in this important field.

CITÉ PAR
  1. Vallero Daniel A., Epilogue, in Biomedical Ethics for Engineers, 2007. Crossref

  2. Monzon Jorge E., Monzon-Wyngaard Alvaro, Professional ethics in biomedical engineering practice and research, 2008 30th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2008. Crossref

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