Historical ethics – Nuremberg, Tuskegee, Belmont MCQs With Answer

Historical ethics – Nuremberg, Tuskegee, Belmont MCQs With Answer

This quiz collection explores landmark episodes and documents that shaped modern research ethics: the Nuremberg Code, the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, and the Belmont Report. It is designed for M.Pharm students to deepen understanding of the moral failures, regulatory responses, and foundational principles—respect for persons, beneficence, and justice—that govern clinical research today. Questions cover historical facts, ethical principles, regulatory outcomes (like the National Research Act and IRBs), informed consent elements, and contemporary implications for pharmaceutical research. Working through these MCQs will strengthen your ability to apply ethical frameworks when designing, reviewing, or conducting clinical studies.

Q1. Which historical event directly prompted the formulation of the Nuremberg Code in 1947?

  • The unethical U.S. syphilis study at Tuskegee
  • Human experimentation by Nazi physicians during World War II
  • The thalidomide birth defect crisis
  • Development of the Declaration of Helsinki

Correct Answer: Human experimentation by Nazi physicians during World War II

Q2. How many basic points are contained in the original Nuremberg Code?

  • 5
  • 8
  • 10
  • 12

Correct Answer: 10

Q3. Which principle from the Belmont Report requires fair distribution of the benefits and burdens of research?

  • Respect for persons
  • Beneficence
  • Justice
  • Nonmaleficence

Correct Answer: Justice

Q4. Which of the following best describes the core requirement of the Nuremberg Code?

  • Mandatory institutional review boards for all studies
  • Voluntary informed consent by the human subject
  • Requirement to publish all negative results
  • Compulsory compensation for research-related injury

Correct Answer: Voluntary informed consent by the human subject

Q5. The Tuskegee Syphilis Study is most notorious for which ethical violation?

  • Failing to obtain informed consent and withholding effective treatment
  • Using placebos in a randomized controlled trial
  • Exposing subjects to ionizing radiation without protection
  • Coercing participants through financial incentives

Correct Answer: Failing to obtain informed consent and withholding effective treatment

Q6. When did the Tuskegee Syphilis Study officially end?

  • 1945
  • 1955
  • 1972
  • 1997

Correct Answer: 1972

Q7. Which U.S. federal law or action was a direct consequence of public outrage over Tuskegee and led to the creation of the National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects?

  • The Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
  • The National Research Act of 1974
  • The Affordable Care Act
  • The Bayh-Dole Act

Correct Answer: The National Research Act of 1974

Q8. Which three ethical principles are explicitly articulated in the Belmont Report?

  • Autonomy, fidelity, beneficence
  • Respect for persons, beneficence, justice
  • Nonmaleficence, utility, confidentiality
  • Transparency, accountability, integrity

Correct Answer: Respect for persons, beneficence, justice

Q9. Which organization issued the Declaration of Helsinki, an influential document on research ethics first adopted in 1964?

  • World Health Organization (WHO)
  • World Medical Association (WMA)
  • United Nations (UN)
  • U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Correct Answer: World Medical Association (WMA)

Q10. Which of the following is NOT an explicit requirement of the original Nuremberg Code?

  • Scientific justification of experiments
  • Voluntary consent of subjects
  • Right of subjects to withdraw at any time
  • Mandatory monetary compensation for all participants

Correct Answer: Mandatory monetary compensation for all participants

Q11. The Belmont Report’s principle of beneficence encompasses which two ethical obligations?

  • Maximize benefits and respect privacy
  • Minimize harms and maximize benefits
  • Obtain consent and ensure confidentiality
  • Assign equal risk and equal benefit to participants

Correct Answer: Minimize harms and maximize benefits

Q12. Which regulatory mechanism in the U.S. was strengthened by the ethical lessons learned from Nuremberg and Tuskegee and is required for federally funded human research?

  • Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP)
  • Institutional Review Board (IRB)
  • Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB)
  • Food safety inspection

Correct Answer: Institutional Review Board (IRB)

Q13. What key ethical failing characterized the Tuskegee study after penicillin became the accepted cure for syphilis in the 1940s?

  • Subjects were given the new antibiotic without consent
  • Researchers continued observation while deliberately withholding penicillin
  • The study shifted to a randomized, blinded design
  • All participants were immediately cured

Correct Answer: Researchers continued observation while deliberately withholding penicillin

Q14. “Respect for persons” in the Belmont Report specifically requires which of the following for competent adults?

  • Presumption of vulnerability and substitution of consent
  • Mandatory enrollment in research for community benefit
  • Recognition of autonomous decision-making and informed consent
  • Prioritizing societal needs over individual choice

Correct Answer: Recognition of autonomous decision-making and informed consent

Q15. Which document is considered the foundational international statement that expanded on the Nuremberg Code and addresses physicians’ responsibilities in research involving human subjects?

  • Belmont Report
  • Declaration of Helsinki
  • Common Rule
  • Helsinki Accord

Correct Answer: Declaration of Helsinki

Q16. Which year did the U.S. government publicly apologize to the victims of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study?

  • 1974
  • 1982
  • 1997
  • 2005

Correct Answer: 1997

Q17. In research ethics, the term “therapeutic misconception” refers to what error by participants?

  • Believing that research aims to provide individualized therapeutic benefit rather than to produce generalizable knowledge
  • Thinking that all experimental interventions are placebos
  • Confusing clinical trials with public health surveillance
  • Assuming investigators have no conflicts of interest

Correct Answer: Believing that research aims to provide individualized therapeutic benefit rather than to produce generalizable knowledge

Q18. Which U.S. federal regulation codifies the Common Rule for human subjects protection (one primary location)?

  • 21 CFR Part 11
  • 45 CFR 46
  • 21 CFR 312
  • 42 U.S.C. 201

Correct Answer: 45 CFR 46

Q19. For M.Pharm students designing a clinical protocol, which Belmont-based requirement ensures that risks are reasonable in relation to potential benefits?

  • Informed consent documentation length
  • Risk-benefit assessment and scientific validity
  • Compensation schedule for subjects
  • Recruitment advertising strategies

Correct Answer: Risk-benefit assessment and scientific validity

Q20. Which measure was a major institutional reform adopted in response to historical abuses to protect subjects in contemporary clinical trials?

  • Removal of all placebo controls
  • Requirement for independent ethical review by IRBs and documented informed consent
  • Prohibition of trials involving sick populations
  • Mandatory public voting on study approval

Correct Answer: Requirement for independent ethical review by IRBs and documented informed consent

Author

  • G S Sachin
    : Author

    G S Sachin is a Registered Pharmacist under the Pharmacy Act, 1948, and the founder of PharmacyFreak.com. He holds a Bachelor of Pharmacy degree from Rungta College of Pharmaceutical Science and Research and creates clear, accurate educational content on pharmacology, drug mechanisms of action, pharmacist learning, and GPAT exam preparation.

    Mail- Sachin@pharmacyfreak.com

Leave a Comment

PRO
Ad-Free Access
$3.99 / month
  • No Interruptions
  • Faster Page Loads
  • Support Content Creators