skip navigation National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD): Improving the lives of people who have communication disorders
One of the National Institutes of Health
Change text size:   S   M   L

May 25, 1999

Working Group on Communicating Informed Consent to Individuals Who Are Deaf or Hard-of-Hearing

I. Introduction
II. Meeting Summary
III. Background
IV. Gary B. Ellis, Ph.D.
V. Benjamin Wilfond, M.D.
VI. Marin P. Allen, Ph.D.
VII. Robert E. Johnson, Ph.D.
VIII. Evelyn McClave, Ph.D.
IX. Patricia A. Kvochak, JD
X. John Madison, Ed.D.
XI. Nancy J. Bloch
XII. Karen Emmorey, Ph.D.
XIII. Thomas B. Friedman, Ph.D.
XIV. General Concerns from Summary Discussion
XV. Brenda Schick, Ph.D.
XVI. Carolyn Stern, M.D.
XVII. John Niparko, M.D.
XVIII. Guidelines on Communicating Informed Consent for Individuals Who Are Deaf or Hard-of-Hearing and Scientists
XIX. Resources

For more information on: "Considerations for Research with Hard-of-Hearing Individuals and Deaf Individuals Who Use Oral Communication", please contact:

Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf (http://www.agbell.org/)

If you would like to print the Working Group on Communicating Informed Consent to Individuals Who Are Deaf or Hard-of-Hearing for future reference, use this ready-to-print version.

NIH Pub. No. 00-4689
September 1999

Top


printer Printer-friendly version


National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders. Celebrating 20 years of research: 1988 to 2008