Ch. 3: Becoming an Ethical Researcher - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Ch. 3: Becoming an Ethical Researcher

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Ch. 3: Becoming an Ethical Researcher (Neuman, pp. 61-83) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch. 3: Becoming an Ethical Researcher


1
Ch. 3 Becoming an Ethical Researcher
  • (Neuman, pp. 61-83)

2
THE ETHICAL IMPERATIVE
Ethical Research Must Balance Two Priorities
Gaining knowledge and finding a clear answer to a
research question
Protecting research participants and upholding
broader human rights
3
Why would a researcher act in an ethically
irresponsible way?
  • Lack of awareness
  • Pressure to take ethical shortcuts, e.g.,
  • Concern for career advancement (in publish or
    perish context)
  • Research ambition, will to advance science
  • Desire for prestige, to impress friends, family
  • Study completion a job requirement
  • Ethical principles are general and often lack
    clear, obvious application
  • And the odds of being caught are low

4
Scientific misconduct
  • Scientific misconduct violating basic and
    generally accepted standards of honest scientific
    research, e.g.,
  • Research fraud
  • Plagiarism

5
Research fraud and plagiarism
  • Research fraud to invent, falsify or distort
    study data or to lie about how a study was
    conducted.
  • Plagiarism using another persons words or ideas
    without giving proper credit and instead passing
    them off as your own.

6
Typology of Legal Ethical Actions in Research
(Fig. 3.2)
Ethical
  • Legal YES
  • Yes Moral and Legal
  • No Illegal but Moral
  • NO
  • Legal but Immoral
  • Immoral and Illegal

7
ETHICAL ISSUES INVOLVING RESEARCH PARTICIPANTS
  • There are many grey areas in which researchers
    must balance competing values, but there are some
    clear prohibitions
  • Never cause unnecessary harm to participants
  • Always secure voluntary consent prior to study
  • Never unnecessarily humiliate or degrade
    participants
  • Never release personally identifying, harmful
    information

8
The Origin of Ethical Principles for Research
with Humans
  • Medical experiments in Nazi Germany Japan in
    the 1940s
  • Tuskegee syphilis study by the US Public Health
    Service
  • US military studies of radioactive substances,
    hallucinogenic drugs, etc.
  • Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital cancer studies in
    1960s
  • Willowbrook School case, injecting children with
    developmental disabilities with hepatitis virus

9
Protect Research Participants from Harm
  • Social research can cause harm in several ways
  • Physical harm
  • Psychological harm
  • Legal harm

10
Participation Must Be Voluntary and Informed
  • principle of voluntary consent never force
    anyone to participate in a research study,
    participants should explicitly and voluntarily
    agree to participate.
  • informed consent an agreement in which
    participants state they are willing to be in a
    study and know what the research procedure will
    involve.

11
Obtaining Informed Consent
  • Informed consent statements contain the
    following
  • 1) Brief description of research purpose,
    procedure and duration
  • 2) Statement of risks or discomfort associated
    with participation
  • 3) Guarantee of anonymity and confidentiality of
    data records
  • 4) Identification of researcher and contact info
  • 5) Statement that participation is voluntary and
    participant can withdraw at any time
  • 6) Statement of alternative procedures that may
    be used
  • 7) Statement of benefits or compensation
  • 8) Offer to provide summary of findings after
    completion of study

12
Limits to Using Deception in Research
  • Deception is acceptable only within strict
    limits, if you do the following
  • Show that it has a clear specific methodological
    purpose
  • Use it only to the minimal degree necessary
  • Obtain informed consent and do not misrepresent
    any risks
  • Always debrief (i.e., explain the actual
    conditions to participants afterward)

13
Avoid Coercion
  • Coercion can be physical, social, legal,
    professional, financial, or other pressure
    applied to get a person to agree to participate

14
Privacy, Anonymity and Confidentiality
  • Research must protect privacy of participants,
    only violating privacy to the minimal degree
    necessary and only for legitimate research
    purposes
  • Additionally, information must be protected from
    public disclosure to ensure
  • Anonymity
  • Confidentiality

15
Anonymity and Confidentiality
  • anonymity not connecting a participants name or
    identifying details to information collected
    about him or her
  • confidentiality holding information in
    confidence or not making it known to the public

16
Anonymity and Confidentiality (contd)
  • Anonymity with confidentiality conduct survey
    with 100 people but do not know participants
    names and only release data in aggregate
  • Anonymity without confidentiality conduct field
    research study and learn a lot about person X but
    never learn persons name report all details
    about the person publicly but alter details to
    make it impossible to discover persons name
  • Confidentiality without anonymity conduct survey
    of 100 people and have each persons name listed
    on his/her questionnaire but only publicly
    release data in aggregate
  • Neither anonymity not confidentiality
    (unethical) conduct survey of 100 people and
    have each persons name on questionnaire
    publicly release a persons answers with the name
    or with enough details to allow easy discovery of
    persons name

17
Anonymity and Confidentiality (contd)
  • Exceptions to privacy protection
  • Clear, immediate danger to a persons safety,
    e.g.,
  • plans to suicide or to injure or kill another
    person
  • information about child maltreatment or abuse

18
Extra Protections for Special Populations
  • Some research participants are unable to give
    true voluntary informed consent, e.g., students,
    prison inmates, employees, military personnel,
    the homeless, welfare recipients, children, or
    the developmentally disabled - special
    populations
  • special populations people lacking the cognitive
    competency or full freedom to give true informed
    consent

19
Extra Protections for Special Populations (contd)
  • If researchers wish to have incompetent people
    participate, they must meet two minimal
    conditions
  • Persons legal guardian/parent grants informed
    consent permission
  • All standard ethical rules to protect
    participants from harm are closely followed

20
Formal Protections for Research Participants
  • In the US, the DHHS Office for the Protection
    from Research Risks issues regulations to protect
    research participants
  • Most local governments, hospitals, universities,
    and private companies model internal policies on
    federal rules
  • US government rules require the creation of
    institutional review boards at all research
    institutes, medical facilities, colleges, and
    universities where research with human subjects
    occurs

21
Institutional Review Board
  • institutional review board (IRB) a committee of
    researchers and community members that oversees,
    monitors, and reviews the impact of research
    procedures on human participants
  • Some forms of research are exempt from a formal,
    full IRB review, e.g., educational tests, normal
    educational practice, most nonsensitive survey
    questionnaires, observations of public behavior,
    studies of existing public data in which
    individuals cannot be identified

22
Codes of ethics
  • Most professionals (e.g., physicians, attorneys,
    family counselors, social workers, etc.) have
    organizations that developed a written code of
    ethics
  • code of ethics a written, formal set of
    professional standards that provides guidance
    when ethical questions arise in practice
  • Most professional social science associations
    have codes of ethics that represent a consensus
    of professionals on ethics
  • Although not all researchers agree on every
    ethical issue, there are common ethical standards
    among members of a profession

23
ETHICS AND SPONSORS OF RESEARCH
  • Special ethical issues arise when a sponsor pays
    for research, especially applied research
  • Limits on how to conduct studies
  • Some are legitimate, some not
  • Suppressing findings
  • In sponsored research, you want to negotiate
    conditions for releasing findings prior to
    beginning the study or signing a contract
  • whistle-blowing when a researcher (or other
    employee) sees unethical behavior and, after
    unsuccessful attempts to get superiors to end it,
    goes public to expose the wrongdoing

24
POLITICAL INFLUENCES ON RESEARCH
  • The powerful in society try to control or censor
    research out of fear that free, unbiased research
    might uncover something damaging to their
    interests
  • Theres a close connection between unimpeded,
    open scientific inquiry and the ideals of open
    public debate, democracy and freedom of
    expression
  • Censoring and controlling research is
    characteristic of dictatorships and totalitarian
    regimes

25
VALUE-FREE AND OBJECTIVE RESEARCH
  • Multiple meanings
  • Alternative goals
  • Devoid of values
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