Brown, E. SherwoodReisch, Joan S.Sadler, John Z.Wright, J. Gregory2015-09-142015-09-142015-09-08https://hdl.handle.net/2152.5/1746Tuesday, September 8, 2015; noon to 1 p.m.; Room D1.602. "Conflicts of Interest in Clinical Research: Lessons from the Minnesota Markingson Case". E. Sherwood Brown, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Psychiatry; Joan Reisch, Ph.D., Professor of Clinical Sciences & Family and Community Medicine; John Z. Sadler, M.D., The Daniel W. Foster, M.D. Professor of Medical Ethics & Professor of Psychiatry; and J. Gregory Wright, A.A.S., B.S., M.C.M., CIP Manager, Institutional Review Board, UT Southwestern Medical Center.The nationally-publicized Markingson case from the University of Minnesota involved a tragic suicide in the context of a university-based, industry-sponsored clinical trial. A panel of UT Southwestern faculty and staff consider the lessons emerging from the Markingson case, identify areas of risk and opportunities for prevention, and map the multiple layers of policy and practice that could prevent such events in the future.MPEG-4 movie00:58:15enGrand RoundsBiomedical ResearchClinical Trials as TopicEthics, ResearchSuicideTeaching RoundsUniversitiesConflicts of interest in clinical research: lessons from the Minnesota Markingson caseVideo939543760