Title | Statistics and ethics in medical research Misuse of statistics is unethical |
Author | Altman D.G. |
Year | 1980 |
Journal | British Medical Journal |
Volume | 281 |
Issue | |
Pages | 1182 - 84. |
Publisher | |
Link_for_PDF_for_Education | |
Link for Open Access | |
DOI | |
Link for DOI | |
Web_Access_Paper | http://www.bmj.com/content/281/6249/1182 |
Contributed_by | Michael Brimacombe PhD, KUMC - KU |
Commentary | The paper is a nice overview of how statistical results in a medical science setting can be misconstrued or deliberately misunderstood and give rise to unethical outcomes in research and legal settings. Ethical conduct as a biostatistician implies reporting results clearly in a fair and useful context, so results can be understood and fairly applied. If not, they can result in the misuse of patients by exposing them to unjustified risk, which violates many current consent criteria. |
Additional_Information | |
Reference_Subject | Biostat_Ethics |
Disclaimer | The views expressed within CTSpedia are those of the author and must not be taken to represent policy or guidance on the behalf of any organization or institution with which the author is affiliated. |