1. Belsky L, Richardson HS. 2004. Medical researchers' ancillary clinical care responsibilities. BMJ 328: 1494-1496.

  2. Brownsword R. 2007. The ancillary-care responsibilities of researchers: reasonable but not great expectations. Journal of Law, Medicine, and Ethics, 35 (4): 679-691.

  3. Dickert N, Wendler D. 2009. Ancillary-care obligations of medical researchers. Journal of the American Medical Association 302 (4): 424-428.

  4. Haire BG. 2013. Ethics of medical care and clinical research: a qualitative study of principal investigators in biomedical HIV prevention research. Journal of Medical Ethics 39: 231-325.

  5. Hooper CR. 2010. Ancillary care duties: the demands of justice. Journal of Medical Ethics 36: 708-711.

  6. Krubiner CB, Syed RH, Merritt MW. 2015. Guidance on health researchers’ ancillary-care responsibilities in low-resource settings: the current institutional landscape. IRB: Ethics and Human Research, 37(2): 12-19.

  7. Merritt MW. 2011. Health researchers’ ancillary care obligations in low-resource settings: how can we tell what is morally required? Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, 21(4): 311-347.

  8. Merritt MW, Taylor HA, Mullany, LC. 2010. Ancillary care in community-based public health intervention research. American Journal of Public Health 100 (2): 211-216.

  9. Participants in the 2006 Georgetown University Workshop on the Ancillary-Care Obligations of Medical Researchers Working in Developing Countries 2008. The ancillary-care obligations of medical researchers working in developing countries. PLoS Medicine 5(5): e90.

  10. Pogge, T. 2007. Severe poverty as a human rights violation. In: POGGE, T. (ed.) Freedom from poverty as a human right: Who owes what to the very poor. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  11. Pratt B, Zion D, Lwin KM, Cheah PY, Nosten F, Loff B.  2013. Ancillary care: from theory to practice in international clinical research. Public Health Ethics 6(2): 154-169.

  12. Richardson HS. 2012. Moral entanglements: the ancillary-care obligations of medical researchers. Oxford University Press.

  13. Richardson HS. 2007. Gradations of researchers' obligation to provide ancillary care for HIV/AIDS in developing countries. American Journal of Public Health 97(11):1956-1961.

  14. Ruger, J.P. 2010. Health and social justice. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  15. Ruger, J.P. 2009. Global health justice. Public Health Ethics, 2, 261-75.

  16. Taylor HA, Merritt MW, Mullany LC. 2011. Ancillary care in public health intervention research in low-resource settings: researchers’ practices and decision-making. Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics 6(3): 73-81.

  17. Scanlon, T.M. 1998. What we owe to each other. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

  18. Scheffler, S. 2001. Boundaries and Allegiances: Problems of Justice and Responsibility in Liberal Thought. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  19. Tshikala T, Mupenda B, Dimany P, Malonga A, Ilunga V, Rennie R. 2012. Engaging with research ethics in central Francophone Africa: reflections on a workshop about ancillary care. Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 7:10.

  20. United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF). 2012. Committing to Child Survival: A Promise Renewed. New York: UNICEF.

  21. WHO. 2010Sickle-Cell Disease: a strategy for the WHO African Region. 

  22. WHO. 2006. Sickle-cell anaemia

Additional references on ancillary care and an annotated bibliography of ancillary care references can be found on Global Health Reviewers’ Ancillary Care Topics Page: https://globalhealthreviewers.tghn.org/topics/ancillary-care/