Capella University Right to Experimental Drugs Paper

Capella University Right to Experimental Drugs Paper

Capella University Right to Experimental Drugs Paper

Please see attached pdf with complete instructions

Instructions

Do patients with no other treatment options have a moral right to unproven drugs? Write a paper that explains and defends your view on this issue. In addition to reviewing the suggested resources, you are encouraged to locate additional resources in the Capella library, your public library, or authoritative online sites to provide additional support for your viewpoint. Be sure to weave and cite the resources throughout your work. In your paper, address the following points:

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Identify relevant ethical theories and moral principles.

Explain how the principle of informed consent is relevant to the issue.

Explain the costs and benefits of making unproven, unapproved experimental drugs widely available to patients. Consider the costs and benefits not only to the individual patients who take these drugs but also potential costs and benefits to other patients.

Explain arguments using examples for and against offering pre-approved drugs to wider pools of patients.

Support your view using ethical theories or moral principles (or both) that you find most relevant to the issue.

Additional Requirements

Written communication: Written communication is free of errors that detract from the overall message.

APA formatting: Resources and citations are formatted according to current APA style and formatting

guidelines.

Length: 2–3 typed, double-spaced pages.

Font and font size: Times New Roman, 12 point.

 

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4/7/2020 Assessment 2 Instructions: A Right to Experimental Drugs? &… Course Navigation  Tutorials Support Carl LogPost Out FACULTY  Alyssa Seehafer Rachel Beltran Cardoso COACH 18  Assessment 2 Instructions: A Right to Experimental Drugs? Write a 2-3 page paper that explains and defends your view on the issue of whether or not patients with no other treatment options have a moral right to unproven drugs. Introduction Many doctors, nurses, medical technicians, and other health care workers are involved in medical research. The field of medicine is not limited to the direct treatment of patients but also involves the continued expansion of medical research. A large part of such research is clinical research, which puts patients into the role of experimental subjects. This raises a number of challenging questions for health care ethics, many