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Imaging research regularly yields incidental findings that may have personal medical or reproductive decision-making significance to study participants. It is widely assumed that researchers have a moral obligation to disclose at least some kinds of incidental findings to research participants. However, it is also a widely held view that researchers do not have a moral obligation to actively look for abnormalities irrelevant to the aims of their study. This paper challenges that assumption.

Original publication

DOI

10.1002/eahr.500043

Type

Journal article

Journal

Ethics & human research

Publication Date

03/2020

Volume

42

Pages

2 - 12

Addresses

Research fellow with the Biomedical Ethics Research Group, the Murdoch Children's Research Institute, and the Melbourne Law School at the University of Melbourne.

Keywords

Humans, Diagnostic Imaging, Incidental Findings, Disclosure, Biomedical Research, Ethics, Research, Moral Obligations, Research Personnel, Research Subjects, Radiologists