Report24th June 2013
Technologies that intervene in the brain offer the potential to help those with conditions that affect the brain, such as Parkinson’s disease, stroke, chronic pain and severe depression.
We present an ethical framework, based around two fundamental considerations: the need for medical interventions to treat brain conditions, and uncertainty about their benefits and risks. It suggests that the virtues of inventiveness, humility and responsibility capture the kinds of behaviours and attitudes that are most important in protecting and promoting the kinds of interests engaged by novel neurotechnologies.
Recommendations are made as to how this ethical approach might guide policy and practice in a number of areas including:
- Care of patients and research participants
- Responsible research and innovation
- Regulation of medical technologies
- Non-medical applications
- Communication and the media