The therapeutic misconseption

Abstract

The therapeutic misconception has been described as the 'research subjects' unwarranted expectations of obtaining medical benefits by participating in clinical trials. Thus, researchers have found a new conceptual instrument to deny that research ought to be of benefit to subjects involved, once again disregarding the difference between therapeutic and non therapeutic clinical trials. This paper argues that patients involved in research are justified and in fact entitled to expect therapeutic benefits from their participation in research protocols, because the sick should only be recruited for such therapeutic trials as designed to improve their medical condition, and ought never to be involved in non therapeutic research and the risks involved. Insisting that therapeutic expectations research subjects constitute a misguided and erroneous attitude, is an unethical bias when applied to countries with precarious medical services. Subjects with unmet medical needs will willingly participate in research that might be the only way of obtaining badly required medication, an expectation that is obviously understandable and in no way fallacious. These justified expectations will be thwarted in those who randomly fall into the control group, thus delivering an additional argument against the use of placebos.

Keywords:

Research. Clinical trials as topic. Therapeutic misconception. Therapeutic fallacy. Human experimentation. Research subjects. Moral obligations

How to Cite

1.
The therapeutic misconseption. Rev. bioét.(Impr.). [Internet]. 2012 Sep. 5 [cited 2024 May 19];20(2). Available from: https://revistabioetica.cfm.org.br/revista_bioetica/article/view/740