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Qualitative Inquiry, Vol. 13, No. 6, 875-894 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1077800407304460
© 2007 SAGE Publications

"Ready-to-Recruit" or "Ready-to-Consent" Populations? Informed Consent and the Limits of Subject Autonomy

Jill A. Fisher

Arizona State University

This article queries the pharmaceutical industry's concept of "ready-torecruit" populations by examining its recruitment strategies for clinical trials and the types of human subjects who participate in these drug studies. The argument is that the pharmaceutical industry has profited from a system composed of what can more aptly be characterized as ready-to-consent populations, meaning populations who do not have better alternatives than participation in clinical trials. Furthermore, through qualitative research, this article aims to highlight some of the limitations of current U.S. federal regulation and to show how these limits signal problems that are not normally discussed in the medical ethics literature about research on human subjects. It does this by examining the impotence of informed consent—both as a concept and as a practice—in light of recruitment strategies and the structural reasons motivating individuals to participate in clinical trials.

Key Words: clinical trials • pharmaceutical industry • informed consent • recruitment • human subjects


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