AAMC Home   Tomorrow's Doctors Tomorrow's Cures
  Home  Government Affairs   Newsroom   Meetings   Publications Shopping Cart   Site Map    

 

Newsroom Home

News Releases

AAMC Reporter

STAT

AAMC & Member Contacts

 

Amicus Brief Filed with Maryland Court of Appeals to Modify Language in Kennedy Krieger Opinion

Press Release

Contact: Retha Sherrod
202-828-0041
rsherrod@aamc.org

For Immediate Release

Washington, September 18, 2001-The Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC), and the Association of American Universities (AAU), announced today that they have joined with two individual institutions, the University of Maryland Medical System, and The Johns Hopkins University, to file an amicus brief supporting the appellant's motion for reconsideration of the opinion issued by the Maryland Court of Appeals in Grimes v. Kennedy Krieger Institute, Inc. The brief does not ask the court to reverse its decision that the two cases at issue should return to the circuit court for adjudication. Instead, it strongly urges that the Court review, reconsider, and rescind only that portion of its decision "that would have a devastating impact on health and human development research."

The August 16, 2001, opinion of the Maryland Court of Appeals made it illegal for parents or guardians to give consent for children or legally impaired adults to participate in non-therapeutic research that poses any level of risk. Since most critically important medical research is, strictly speaking, "non-therapeutic," and since virtually all research, by its nature, poses some level of risk, the Court's ruling would make most medical and public health research involving children or legally impaired adults impossible to conduct in Maryland.

Under existing federal rules, parents or guardians may consent to the participation of children and legally-impaired adults in medical research under carefully controlled circumstances. The signatories ask the Court to revise the portion of its opinion that would erect an unworkable standard for participation in research in Maryland, one that would be "vastly more restrictive than that of any other state or that of the federal government." The AAMC and the AAU believe that unless modified, the legal standard announced in the Court's opinion would greatly harm the progress of medical science. As noted in the amicus brief, "if the legal standard is that research must be therapeutic for each and every individual involved who faces any risk, a great deal of health research involving children and other persons under legal disability (e.g., persons with Alzheimer's disease), including research regarding the causes, progression, prevention, and treatment of conditions of high morbidity and mortality, could never be conducted."

Neither the brief nor the motion for reconsideration being filed by the Kennedy Krieger Institute asks the court to set aside its decision to permit a trial on the issues raised in the underlying litigation, which concerns the conduct of an EPA-supported study of lead abatement conducted by the Kennedy Krieger Institute.

###

The Association of American Medical Colleges represents the 125 accredited U.S. medical schools; the 16 accredited Canadian medical schools; some 400 major teaching hospitals, including 74 Veterans Administration medical centers; 91 academic and professional societies representing over 100,000 faculty members; and the nation's 67,000 medical students and 102,000 residents.

The Association of American Universities is an organization of research universities devoted to maintaining a strong system of research and education. It currently consists of 61 U.S. universities and two Canadian universities.

# # #

The Association of American Medical Colleges is a not-for-profit association representing all 129 accredited U.S. and 17 accredited Canadian medical schools; nearly 400 major teaching hospitals and health systems, including 68 Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers; and 94 academic and scientific societies. Through these institutions and organizations, the AAMC represents 109,000 faculty members, 67,000 medical students, and 104,000 resident physicians. Additional information about the AAMC and U.S. medical schools and teaching hospitals is available at www.aamc.org/newsroom.

Contact Us    © 1995-2008 AAMC    Terms and Conditions    Privacy Statement