Ethical Issues in Environmental Health Research
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Environmental health research encompasses a wide range of investigational topics, study designs, and empirical methodologies. As that arm of public health research concerned with understanding the health effects of the many environments in which humans live and work, the field is intimately connected with social concerns about environmental quality and disparities of power and privilege that place differential burdens upon members of underserved communities. Environmental health researchers thus engage many ethical and social issues in the work they do. These issues relate to the choice of research topics to study, the methods employed to examine these topics, the communication of research findings to the public, and the involvement of scientific experts in the shaping of environmental policy and governmental regulation. These and other topics are reviewed in this article. These ethical, legal, and social issues are becoming increasingly more complex as new genetic and molecular techniques are used to study environmental toxicants and their potential influence on human and ecologic health.
Environmental Health Research Involving Human Subjects: Ethical Issues.
Resnik D Environ Health Insights. 2010; 2008(2):27-34.
PMID: 20401332 PMC: 2855191. DOI: 10.4137/EHI.S892.
Gilbert S Environ Health Perspect. 2006; 114(10):1626-9.
PMID: 17035155 PMC: 1626437. DOI: 10.1289/ehp.9005.
Privacy and ethics in pediatric environmental health research-part I: genetic and prenatal testing.
Fisher C Environ Health Perspect. 2006; 114(10):1617-21.
PMID: 17035153 PMC: 1626406. DOI: 10.1289/ehp.9003.
Research on environmental health interventions: ethical problems and solutions.
Resnik D, Zeldin D, Sharp R Account Res. 2005; 12(2):69-101.
PMID: 16220621 PMC: 3941191. DOI: 10.1080/08989620590957157.