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Daniele Carrieri [3]D. Carrieri [2]
  1.  58
    Ethical issues and best practice in clinically based genomic research: Exeter Stakeholders Meeting Report.D. Carrieri, C. Bewshea, G. Walker, T. Ahmad, W. Bowen, A. Hall & S. Kelly - 2016 - Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (11):695-697.
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  2.  35
    Dimensions of responsibility in medical genetics: exploring the complexity of the “duty to recontact”.Shane Doheny, Angus Clarke, Daniele Carrieri, Sandi Dheensa, Naomi Hawkins, Anneke Lucassen, Peter Turnpenny & Susan Kelly - 2018 - New Genetics and Society 37 (3):187-206.
    Discussion of a “duty to recontact” emerged as technological advances left professionals considering getting back in touch with patients they had seen in the past. While there has been much discussion of the duty to recontact as a matter of theory and ethics, there has been rather little empirically based analysis of what this “duty” consists of. Drawing on interviews with 34 professionals working in, or closely with, genetics services, this paper explores what the “duty to recontact” means for healthcare (...)
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  3.  47
    Ethical issues in genomic research: Proposing guiding principles co-produced with stakeholders.D. Carrieri, L. Jackson, C. Bewshea, B. Prainsack, J. Mansfield, T. Ahmad, N. Hawkins & S. Kelly - 2018 - Clinical Ethics 13 (4):194-198.
    Ethical guidance for genomic research is increasingly sought and perceived to be necessary. Although there are pressing ethical issues in genomic research – concerning for example the recruitment of patients/participants; the process of taking consent; data sharing; and returning results to patients/participants – there is still limited useful guidance available for researchers/clinicians or for the research ethics committees who review such projects. This report outlines the ethical principles and guidance for genomic research co-produced with stakeholders during two workshops which took (...)
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  4.  18
    Seeing beyond COVID-19: understanding the impact of the pandemic on oncology, and the importance of preparedness.Daniele Carrieri & Fedro Alessandro Peccatori - 2020 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 42 (4):1-5.
    The impact of this pandemic is not only through COVID-19 itself: the care for non-COVID-19 related conditions has been dramatically curtailed, shaking entire healthcare services around the world. Amongst the non-COVID-19 related conditions, oncology has been disproportionally affected. We discuss how oncology has changed since the acute phase of the pandemic; its impact on clinicians, trainees, and patients; and offer some medical and historical perspectives to reflect on how this impact could be reduced.
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