0 the act of saying officially that an agreement, law, etc. is no longer in effect: --
1 the act of stating officially that an agreement, right, or legal document is no longer effective: --
In developing a research protocol, careful account needs to be taken of obligations of the subject to the research and the mechanism for revocation of consent.
These considerations should be addressed during the development of the protocol and contained in consent forms even at the risk of implanting the idea of revocation with the subject.
The hurt and suffering he endured as a result of the revocation of his clearance was movingly conveyed in talks he gave in the fall of 1954.
One relates to his choice to become a physicist; another, his decision to give up being a physicist; the third pertains to the revocation of his security clearance.
He gives two reasons for not reading the revocation as containing ' instructions ' to the reader.
This was the first of only two orders ever issued under this regulation before its revocation in 1951.
The revocation of informed consent may be more appropriate with risks of continued participation and no benefit to the particular subject.
In the first case, the emphasis is placed on an ease of revocation after a very arduous process of informed consent.