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Research Ethics in the Allied Health Professions

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Research Ethics in the Allied Health Professions Monika S. Markowitz, Ph.D. Director, Office of Education and Compliance Oversight Vice President s Office for Research – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Research Ethics in the Allied Health Professions


1
Research Ethics in the Allied Health Professions
  • Monika S. Markowitz, Ph.D.
  • Director, Office of Education and Compliance
    Oversight
  • Vice Presidents Office for Research
  • Virginia Commonwealth University



  • 9/07

2
Objectives
  • Research ethics and its underlying principles
  • Considerations by the IRB in ethics review of
    human subjects research
  • Tensions within and between the ethical
    principles and challenges for review

3
Research ethics
  • A normative ethics Which moral norms for
    guidance and evaluation of conduct should we
    accept and why?
  • Comprises morally informed policies and
    regulations

4
History of Research Transgressions leads to
research oversight
  • Nazi medical war crimes
  • Nuremberg Code 1947
  • Tuskegee Syphillis Study
  • Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital
  • Willowbrook

5
National Commission for the Protection of Human
Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research
1974
2007
6
The Belmont Report
Respect for Persons
Beneficence
Justice
7
The Belmont Principles1979
  • Respect for Persons
  • Individual autonomy
  • Protection of individuals with diminished
    autonomy
  • Beneficence
  • Maximize benefits and minimize harms
  • Do good, not just avoid harm
  • Justice
  • Equitable distribution of research costs and
    benefits

8
How the Belmont Principles are to be enacted in
research
  • Respect for persons informed consent

  • privacy confidentiality
  • Beneficence benefit/risk
    (burden)

  • assessment
  • Justice distribution
    of risk and

  • benefit

  • inclusion/exclusion

9
Federal Regulations and Policy stemming from
ethical principles
45 CFR 46 DHHS Policy for Protection of
Human Research Subjects- Subpart A Originally
adopted January 13, 1981 Revised June 18,
1991 The Common Rule adopted by 17 federal
agencies, including FDA-regulated
research Federal-wide Assurance VCUs promise
to the federal government that research will be
compliant with regs
10
Primary features of federal regulations informed
by ethical principles
  • Requirement of prospective IRB review and
    approval of human subjects research
  • Requirement for a formal informed consent process
    for research that is not exempt
  • Risk is 1) minimized, and 2) reasonable in
    relation to anticipated benefits

11
Primary features of federal regulations
  • Additional requirements for 3 groups of
    vulnerable populations pregnant women, fetuses,
    and neonates prisoners children
  • Requirement for continuing review on expedited
    and full board studies at least annually
  • Additional requirements for drugs, devices,
    biologics or other research disciplines with
    specific regulation

12
Primary features of federal regulations
  • Requirement of IRB review and approval for human
    subjects research

13
Institutional Review Board (IRB)
  • Established to provide ethical review of research
  • Assure that federal regulations are followed
  • Members include researchers, non-researchers and
    members of the local community
  • 5 IRBs at VCU
  • Regulatory and ethical charge review and approve
    human subjects research to protect the rights
    and welfare of research participants

  • 45CFR46.103(b)

14
Activities needing IRB approval
  • RESEARCH
  • A systematic investigation designed to develop or
    contribute to generalizable knowledge.
  • 45 CFR 46.102(d)
  • HUMAN SUBJECT
  • A living individual about whom an
    investigatorconducting research obtains
  • 1) data through intervention or interaction with
    the individual, or
  • 2) identifiable private information
  • 45 CFR 46.102(f)

15
Primary features of federal regulations
  • Requirement of IRB review and approval for human
    subjects research
  • Requirement for consideration of a formal
    informed consent process for research that is not
    exempt

16
Elements of informed
consent
  • Disclosure of relevant information
  • Understanding of disclosure and recommendation
  • Capacity to understand and decide
  • Voluntariness

17
Problems of disclosure and comprehensionHow much
to disclose and to what standard?
18
Decision making capacity ability to make and
communicate a decision consistently over time
according to internalized values
19
Is consent given voluntarily?
20
Primary features of federal regulations
  • Requirement of prospective IRB review and
    approval of human subjects research
  • Requirement for a formal informed consent process
    for research that is not exempt
  • Risk is 1) minimized, and 2) is reasonable in
    relation to anticipated benefits

21
IRB Review Continuum
Level of potential risk determines route of
review for biomedical and social-behavioral
research
  • Exempt Expedited Full

Low Risk
High No greater than minimal risk
22
Definition of Minimal Risk45 CFR 46.102(i)
  • Minimal Risk means that the probability and
    magnitude of harm or discomfort anticipated in
    the research are not greater in and of themselves
    than those ordinarily encountered in daily life
    or during the performance of routine physical or
    psychological examination or tests.

23
  • IRB considers the risk of criminal/civil
    liability, financial risk, employment risk,
    stigmatization, insurability, and embarrassment
    in deciding if risk is truly minimal.

24
Privacy and Confidentiality
  • When appropriate, there are adequate provisions
    to protect the privacy of subjects and to
    maintain the
  • confidentiality of data 45CFR46111(a)
  • Breaches of privacy and/or confidentiality are
    the main risk in social-
  • behavioral research or
  • research that is no greater
  • than minimal risk

25
Primary features of federal regulations
  • Additional requirements for 3 groups of
    vulnerable populations pregnant women, fetuses,
    and neonates prisoners children

26
Populations specifically protected in federal
regulations 45CFR46
  • Pregnant women - Subpart B
  • Prisoners Subpart C
  • Children Subpart D

27
Other considerations may also count as
Vulnerable
  • Language
  • Culture
  • Current Events or Incidents
  • Age (elderly)
  • Age (adolescents)
  • Educationally, economically disadvantaged
  • Transient Cognitive Impairment
  • Substance Use
  • Health Status
  • Students
  • Employees

28
Primary features of federal regulations
  • Additional requirements for 3 groups of
    vulnerable populations pregnant women, fetuses,
    and neonates prisoners children
  • Requirement for continuing review on expedited
    and full board studies at least annually
  • Additional requirements for drugs, devices,
    biologics or other research disciplines with
    specific regulation

29
Tension within respect for persons
  • Presumptions of Informed consent, Assent, and
    Parental permission
  • Presumption about the incapacity of certain
    vulnerable groups
  • Presumption about the abilities of LARs
  • Presumption about the extent to which potential
    subjects may be influenced to participate

30
Tension within beneficence
  • Definition of Minimal Risk45 CFR 46.102(i)
  • Minimal Risk means that the probability and
    magnitude of harm or discomfort anticipated in
    the research are not greater in and of themselves
    than those ordinarily encountered in daily life
    or during the performance of routine physical or
    psychological examination or tests.

31
Tension within beneficencerisk/benefit
assessment
  • Which type of risk is
  • more or less probable,
  • more or less severe?
  • Whose daily life,
  • what kinds of
  • procedures or tests
  • are routine?
  • Whose benefit?

32
Tensions between ethical principles
  • Respect for persons
  • Beneficence

33
Special Protections
  • Some persons are in need of extensive protection,
    even to the point of excluding them from
    activities which may harm them
  • other persons require little protection beyond
    making sure they undertake activities freely and
    with awareness of possible adverse consequence.
  • The Belmont Report

34
Paternalism in the system?
  • Arguments
  • Subjects give informed consent
  • IRBs overinterpret probability and magnitude of
    risk thereby overprotecting subjects who should
    decide for themselves
  • The point of regulations to protect research
    subjects is to assure that research protocols are
    consent-worthy that they agree with the values
    the agent her- or himself would deem relevant if
    she were in a position to accurately make such
    judgments.
  • Miller Wertheimer, 2007, HCR, 37.3, 24-35.

35
The Case of What you dont know wont hurt you

36
The Case of What you dont know wont hurt you
  • An Investigator wishes to determine the
    prevalence of repetitive behaviors in individuals
    with Alzheimers Disease
  • PI proposes that nurses in chronic care
    facilities record the number and nature of such
    behaviors for individual residents
  • PI decides the research should be exempt from IRB
    review under the federal regulations which allow
    such exemptions if the research is limited to
    observation of public behavior

37
The Case of What you dont know wont hurt you
  • Upon initial review by the IRB, the investigator
    is advised to resubmit the proposal for expedited
    review and requests a waiver of the requirement
    to obtain informed consent. The main reason for
    the waiver request is that the research could not
    practicably be carried out without the waiver
    because many of the patients, due to cognitive
    deficits, choose not to participate in any
    activities. Since this is a prevalence study,
    such nonparticipation would markedly weaken the
    findings. The PI does not feel the rights or
    welfare of the subjects are impacted if consent
    is waived.

38
Tensions between ethical principles
  • Justice
  • Respect for persons Beneficence

39
Vulnerable populations
  • Arguments
  • Justice and fairness requires their participation
  • Research participation leads to benefit for the
    vulnerable group, but risk may be greater
  • Informed decision making is often perilous
    potential subjects and/or use of LAR

40
Non-English speaking persons
  • Arguments
  • Unfair to exclude them and bar them from possible
    benefit principle of justice
  • Should have access to an informed consent process
    which includes translated form and interpreter
    throughout the research process respect for
    persons
  • Poor communication of adverse events or problems,
    thus placing themselves and other subjects at
    greater risk beneficence

41
Criteria For IRB Approval 45 CFR 46.111
  • Minimized risks
  • Reasonable risk/benefit relationship
  • Equitable subject selection
  • Informed consent process
  • Informed consent documentation
  • Data monitored for safety, if appropriate
  • Confidentiality/privacy maintained
  • Vulnerable populations protected

42
Minimizing Research Risk
  • Excerpt from an actual consent form describing
    risk
  • The radiation to which you would be exposed in
    this study is no greater than that during a
    nuclear attack.
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