Data Safety Monitoring Boards: A Bioethical Perspective
By (Author) Deborah R. Barnbaum
MIT Press Ltd
MIT Press
16th September 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
Paperback
202
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
A critical and underexplored area of bioethics-ethical issues that emerge from the data monitoring of clinical trials. A critical and underexplored area of bioethics-ethical issues that emerge from the data monitoring of clinical trials. Data Safety Monitoring Boards explores ethical issues confronted by data safety monitoring boards, or DSMBs, overseeing large randomized clinical trials. DSMBs meet on a regular basis to ensure that the expected benefits of a study continue to outweigh its risks and that side-effects are monitored. They are empowered to recommend to study sponsors that studies be halted if ethical protections fail. Written by bioethicist Deborah Barnbaum, who served as a clinical ethicist and patient advocate on several DSMBs for the National Institutes of Health since 2006, this book combines compelling narratives about clinical trials, the ethical quandaries that emerge when overseeing those studies, and the theoretical considerations that guide the practices of DSMBs.
Deborah R. Barnbaum is Professor of Philosophy at Kent State University. In 2009, she received the bronze medal in the Health/Medicine/Nutrition category of the Independent Book Publishers Awards for her book The Ethics of Autism.