Jeremy Sugarman
Johns Hopkins University
413 Papers
2.6K Citations
Jeremy Sugarman is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Informed consent & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 393 publications. Previous affiliations of Jeremy Sugarman include Durham University & University of Melbourne.
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Papers
Dealing With the Long-Term Social Implications of Research
Alan R. Fleischman,Carol Levine,Lisa Eckenwiler,Christine Grady,Dale E. Hammerschmidt,Jeremy Sugarman +5 more
TL;DR: The authors examines the reasons that the federal regulations preclude IRBs from assessing the social risks of research, and examines alternative approaches that have been used with varying success by national advisory groups to provide such guidance.
Policies of academic medical centers for disclosing financial conflicts of interest to potential research participants
Kevin P. Weinfurt,Michaela A. Dinan,Jennifer S. Allsbrook,Joëlle Y. Friedman,Mark A. Hall,Kevin A. Schulman,Jeremy Sugarman +6 more
TL;DR: The current state of institutional review board (IRB) and conflict of interest committee policies regarding disclosures of financial conflicts of interest to potential research participants are documented and models for effectively achieving disclosure are shared.
Experimental Philosophical Bioethics.
Brian D. Earp,Joanna Demaree-Cotton,Michael Dunn,Vilius Dranseika,Vilius Dranseika,Jim A. C. Everett,Jim A. C. Everett,Adam Feltz,Gail Geller,Ivar R. Hannikainen,Lynn A. Jansen,Joshua Knobe,Julia Kolak,Stephen R. Latham,Adam Lerner,Joshua May,Mark R. Mercurio,Emilian Mihailov,Emilian Mihailov,David Rodríguez-Arias,Blanca Rodríguez López,Julian Savulescu,Mark Sheehan,Nina Strohminger,Jeremy Sugarman,Kathryn Tabb,Kevin Tobia +26 more
TL;DR: Here, this emerging discipline is introduced, it is explained how it is distinct from empirical bioethics more broadly construed, and how it might advance theory and practice in this area is attempted.
Preventive misconception: its nature, presence, and ethical implications for research.
TL;DR: This study newly describes the concept of preventive misconception and empirically demonstrates its existence in trials of prevention, a misunderstanding in which study participants may overestimate the protection that they receive by being enrolled in a trial of prevention.
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Effects of Disclosing Financial Interests on Attitudes Toward Clinical Research
Kevin P. Weinfurt,Mark A. Hall,Michaela A. Dinan,Venita DePuy,Joëlle Y. Friedman,Jennifer S. Allsbrook,Jeremy Sugarman +6 more
TL;DR: Aside from a researcher holding an equity interest, the disclosure to potential research participants of financial interests in research, as recommended in recent policies, is unlikely to affect willingness to participate in research.