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Domestic AIDS Vaccine Trials:
Addressing the Potential for Social Harm to the Subjects
of Human Experiments
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Philip A. Leider
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| In 1998, the FDA approved the first large-scale
human trials of a candidate AIDS vaccine in our
nations history. While the legal issues
raised by these trials are manifold, the academic
literature has focused almost exclusively on the
potential for mass tort liability and the
resulting hesitancy of biotech and pharmaceutical
firms to enter the field. This Comment argues
that another issue of vital concern demands
attention: the potential for social harm to the
human subjects of AIDS vaccine trials. After
providing an overview of the current epidemiology
of HIV/AIDS and explaining why a safe, effective
AIDS vaccine represents the best way to control
the pandemic, this Comment analyzes the
scientific and social obstacles to production of
such a vaccine. In order to know whether a
candidate AIDS vaccine is truly effective,
researchers will have to test the product in HIV-negative
volunteers at high risk of infection. Since these
volunteers may subsequently test positive for HIV
on standard blood tests, they will be vulnerable
to discrimination on that basis in such areas as
employment, insurance, immigration, and
incarceration. Moreover, by participating in
vaccine trials, volunteers will be marking
themselves as people at high risk of HIV
infection, another basis for disparate treatment.
Researchers have suggested that federal
disability discrimination law may afford
protection against research-related social harms.
Through close analysis of the Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1990 and the Supreme Courts
decision in Bragdon v. Abbott, this Comment
demonstrates that optimistic reliance on federal
disability law is misplaced. The unique issues
raised by domestic AIDS vaccine trials must be
addressed in their own right. The Comment
accordingly concludes with a broad range of
legislative and regulatory proposals to protect
trial participants and advance the AIDS vaccine
research agenda. |
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Copyright
© 2000 by California Law Review, Inc.
California Law Review, Inc. (CLR) is a California
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