Abstract

BackgroundMedical ethics has existed since the time of Hippocrates. However, formal training in bioethics did not become established until a few decades ago. Bioethics has gained a strong foothold in health sciences in the developed world, especially in Europe and North America. The situation is quite different in many developing countries. In most African countries, bioethics – as established and practiced today in the west- is either non-existent or is rudimentary.DiscussionThough bioethics has come of age in the developed and some developing countries, it is still largely "foreign" to most African countries. In some parts of Africa, some bioethics conferences have been held in the past decade to create research ethics awareness and ensure conformity to international guidelines for research with human participants. This idea has arisen in recognition of the genuine need to develop capacity for reviewing the ethics of research in Africa. It is also a condition required by external sponsors of collaborative research in Africa. The awareness and interest that these conferences have aroused need to be further strengthened and extended beyond research ethics to clinical practice. By and large, bioethics education in schools that train doctors and other health care providers is the hook that anchors both research ethics and clinical ethics.SummaryThis communication reviews the current situation of bioethics in Africa as it applies to research ethics workshops and proposes that in spite of the present efforts to integrate ethics into biomedical research in Africa, much still needs to be done to accomplish this. A more comprehensive approach to bioethics with an all-inclusive benefit is to incorporate formal ethics education into health training institutions in Africa.

Highlights

  • Medical ethics has existed since the time of Hippocrates

  • Summary: This communication reviews the current situation of bioethics in Africa as it applies to research ethics workshops and proposes that in spite of the present efforts to integrate ethics into biomedical research in Africa, much still needs to be done to accomplish this

  • In 1803, Thomas Percival published his book on Medical Ethics, which became the template on which the code of ethics of the American Medical Association was based in 1847 [1]

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Summary

Discussion

Research ethics In the bioethics literature, bioethical discourse and arguments have been most prominent and intense concerning research involving human participants. Ethics education In the developed world education in ethics is no longer a "hidden curriculum" [17] that is passively passed to medical students during their training It has become an "open" subject that is actively taught, in medical schools, and in institutions that train other categories of health care workers. It is time for Africa to join the rest of the world by introducing ethics education into the curricula of all medical schools where it is not presently taught This is where the future of bioethics and health care delivery and research in Africa lies. Those Africans who have undergone bioethics training in the developed world and have become pioneers in their institutions have an awesome responsibility of establishing credible training agenda for their countries They are well positioned to directly seek funding for such home-based programmes from international sponsors. Rather than retreiting and reinforcing western notions, there are enough ethical issues in the developing world to which such trainees could direct their searchlight and scholarship

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Summary
Potter VR
20. Olukoya AA
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