If Researchers Find a Tumor Should They Tell You? - Exploring Ethics

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Research imaging studies, including MRI and CT scans, may provide different information than the imaging performed for clinical care. For instance, a liver MRI using research sequences could be more sensitive at detecting tumors than a standard study. As a result, a patient might no longer qualify for surgery according to the research study. However, information derived from research sequences may not be clinically accurate. Hence the need to conduct a thorough investigation and compare against a gold standard (e.g. a surgical result). Kathryn Fowler, MD, Associate Professor of Clinical Radiology at UC San Diego discuses the ethics of patients and physicians being made aware of research results if they are not verifiably accurate. [11/2019] [Show ID: 34997]

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How is this even a question? It says a lot about the state of ethics in medicine.

danyellerobinson
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They better tell me if I have a tumor.

AscheDjidoi
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Rhetorical question I would hope.

If their not sure then that is a different matter.

There are alternate modalities which can be used.

myopenmind