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About 70 percent of Americans now die at hospitals or other facilities, rather than at home, and the bodies that do go through a formal viewing are preserved with embalming fluid and covered with makeup, then sealed in caskets to decompose deep underground. [1]

The Belmont Report[edit]

The Belmont Report was created to describe the ethical behaviors that involve researching human subjects. By looking primarily at biomedical and behavioral research that involve human subjects, the report was generated to promise that ethical standards are followed during research of human subjects.[2] There are three standards that serve as the baseline for the report and how human subjects are to be researched. The three guidelines are beneficence, justice and respect for persons. Beneficence is described as protecting the well-being of the persons and respecting their decisions by being ethical. The two rules of beneficence are maximizing the benefits of research and minimizing any possible risks.[3] It is the job of the researcher to inform the persons of the benefits as well as the risks of human subject research. Justice is important because it causes the researchers to be fair in their research findings and share what they have found, whether the information is good or bad.[3] Lastly, respect for persons explains that at any point a person who is involved in a study can decide whether they want to participate, not to participate or withdraw themselves from the study altogether. Two rules of respect for persons involve the person being autonomous and persons with diminished autonomy and entitled to protection. [2] The sole purpose of these guidelines is to ensure autonomy and to protect against those with a lesser chance to remain autonomous because of something out of their control. [2]

  1. ^ Stromberg, Joseph (2014-10-28). "The science of human decay: Inside the world's largest body farm". Vox. Retrieved 2017-02-06.
  2. ^ a b c "The Belmont Report". HHS.gov. 2010-01-28. Retrieved 2017-04-03.
  3. ^ a b "MSU Authentication | Michigan State University". ovidsp.tx.ovid.com.proxy2.cl.msu.edu. Retrieved 2017-04-03.