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12 Med., Health Care & Phil. 1 (2009)

handle is hein.journals/medhcph12 and id is 1 raw text is: Med Health Care and Philos (2009) 12:1-2
DOI 10.1007/s 11019-008-9170-y
I  I)I  I  ()R  \ I
Moral agents in medical research and practice
Wim Dekkers - Bert Gordijn
Published online: 21 October 2008
© The Author(s) 2008. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com

The first three papers in this issue deal with the physician-
patient-relationship. Helge Skirbekk focuses on the micro-
ethical issue of trust in the physician-patient-relationship.
In most of the medical encounters trust is taken for granted
as an implicit phenomenon. Patients often simply assume
that they can trust their physician. But the physician-
patient-relationship can be made a topic for negotiations if
either party finds reason for it. Examples are non-compli-
ance of the patient and doctors who drink too much.
Negotiating trust is something one cannot always avoid in
order to build an adequate physician-patient-relationship.
Andreas Langer et al. focus on the physician-patient-rela-
tionship from a somewhat unusual perspective. They
attempt to build a bridge between economic theory and
medical ethics by applying elements of new institutional
economics to ethically relevant dimensions of the physi-
cian-patient-relationship. Physicians cannot always give
the best possible treatment for their patients because of
financial restrictions. Andreas Langer et al. present a new
version of the principal-agent-theory in order to analyse this
dilemma of medical doctors. Their model of the so-called
dual principal-agent relationship can be used to widen
the perspective of medical ethics. Individual ethics of the
physician-patient-relationship should be complemented
with institutional, especially economic, considerations. In
their paper, Kjetil Rommetveit and Rouven Porz tell the
story of a patient facing the tough decision of whether to be
tested for Huntington's disease or not. They interpret this
story from two different philosophical points of view:
Aristotle's perception of Greek tragedy and Karl Jaspers'
W. Dekkers (®) - B. Gordijn
UMC St Radboud Nijmegen, P.O. Box 9101, Nijmegen,
The Netherland
e-mail: v.hulsman@iq.umcn.nl

notion of boundary situations (Grenzsituationen). The
authors argue that philosophical-anthropological positions
like these two may be useful for elucidating ethical dilem-
mas in the clinical setting and for gaining a deeper
understanding of these dilemmas. They can be seen as
hermeneutic tools for situating clinical dilemmas in a
broader cultural and philosophical perspective.
The next three papers can be subsumed under the heading
of research ethics in a pluralistic society. Lars Oystein Ursin
tackles the problem of informed consent in biomedical
research. Taking consent for biobank research as an exam-
ple, he argues that in ethical considerations there is often a
confusion of autonomy with liberty interpreted as freedom
of choice. In his view we need to make a clear distinction
between two ways of understanding the notion of personal
autonomy, that is, a proceduralist conception linking auton-
omy with authenticity and a substantivist conception linking
autonomy with control. Informed consent requirements in
medical research may bring about a conflict between a
participant's interest in personal autonomy with his or her
interest in liberty. Ilhan Ilkilic and Norbert Paul also focus
on biomedical research, especially on genome diversity
research. An important part of genome diversity research is
taking blood and tissue samples from indigenous popula-
tions. The authors widen the scope from micro issues such as
informed consent and autonomy of probands to a wider
approach in which also cultural-philosophical, meta-ethical,
and phenomenological aspects are taken into account. They
show a few limits of current guidelines used in international
genome diversity studies and end up with some conclusions
to further develop these international guidelines. From this
paper it is not a big step to the following one. Chris Durante's
paper does not deal with clinical medicine or biomedical
research, but with bioethics in a pluralistic society. In his
view, many theorists fail to take into consideration the

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