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Creating an IRB Proposal

Creating an IRB Proposal. Human Research Protection Program 357 Administration Building 806-742-2064 Donna Peters Esther Lucey Rick Shupe. The Belmont Report. The guiding principles behind human subjects research Respect for persons (Consent)

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Creating an IRB Proposal

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  1. Creating an IRB Proposal Human Research Protection Program 357 Administration Building 806-742-2064 Donna PetersEsther LuceyRick Shupe

  2. The Belmont Report • The guiding principles behind human subjects research • Respect for persons (Consent) • informed enough to make a decision to participate? • Beneficence (Risk/Benefit Assessment) • what are the risks? the benefits? • Justice (Selection of Subjects) • people must be treated equally and fairly

  3. Proposal Levels of Review • Exempt: An IRB review category that does not require annual renewal, poses no more than minimal risk to human subjects, and usually involves anonymous data (no identifiable information) • Examples • Teaching strategies • Surveys • Taste testing and food quality • Program evaluations

  4. Proposal Levels of Review • Expedited Review - An IRB category that involves no more than minimal risk but may include identifiers and data that needs to be protected and kept confidential • Examples • Children (2 reviewers) • Focus groups • Blood draws • Collection of data from voice, video, digital or image recordings

  5. Proposal Levels of Review • Full Board Review: An IRB category that involves a higher degree of potential risk to human subjects • Examples • Genetics (identifiable information, future use) • Medical procedures • Vulnerable populations • Prisoners • Exercise and sports activity

  6. HRPP Websitewww.hrpp.ttu.edu Guidance Training Proposals

  7. Proposal Levels of Review

  8. The Cover Sheet • Standard for every submission • Proposal Title • List the PI and C0-investigators • Requires signatures • Department information • Type of Review • Determines other forms required • Special Populations • Funding (Sponsored) • Can be filled out online

  9. Claim for Exemption (Criteria)

  10. Expedited Review Form Please Underline

  11. The Proposal • The heading should include: • The name of the PI • The name(s) of the co-investigators • The title of the research proposal • Follow the format sequence • Use Roman numerals • Insert page numbers • Submit single-sided only • Do not use staples

  12. The Rationale • Describe: • The problem or purpose of the research; • The present knowledge relevant to the problem (cite your sources in the body); • The aims of the proposed study; • Clearly state the potential benefits of the work to the subjects involved; and, • The importance of the knowledge to be obtained. • Rationale narrative should be at least 2-3 paragraphs but no more 2-3 pages.

  13. II. Subjects • Describe the target population (i.e., Pregnant mothers with children under 3 years of age, TTU students, faculty/staff, etc.) • Provide a specific age range if all ages are not included and explain • Describe any exclusions (i.e., non-English speaking, females only, etc.) and explain why other groups are not being used (Belmont - Justice) • Describe the recruitment procedure • What media will be used to recruit (TechAnnounce, social networks, TV/radio ads, SONA, organizational websites, fliers, emailings etc.) • Include copies of each recruiting document (www.hrpp.ttu.edu) • Information sheet/Consent form (Belmont – Respect) – consent forms are not used for Exempt reviews • Each document should be a separately labeled attachment (i.e., Attachment A – TechAnnounce Ad; Attachment B – Recruiting Email; Attachment C – Information Sheet, etc.) and placed in order of the chronological steps in section III. Procedures • Example • The participants for this study are persons considered successful small business owners in towns with populations between 15,000 and 35,000 in eastern Arizona. Names, phone numbers and email addresses of potential participants for this study will be compiled through information taken from public industry websites.

  14. III. Procedures • This section should be a step-by-step, chronological sequence (beginning with recruitment) of the manner and order you will conduct your research and the Attachments/Appendices should follow that specific order. • Cite the attachments in the body of this section. • Identify and assess any risks (physical, psychological, social, legal, and economic) to participants. (Belmont – Beneficence) • If there are no risks, clearly state. • If there are risks, include any precautions that will be taken to avoid negative outcomes. • If there are risks, provide an estimate of their frequency, severity, and reversibility. • How is the risk to vulnerable populations (infants, fetuses, pregnant mothers, prisoners, children) being minimized? • How are privacy and confidentiality being protected? Where is the data being stored and who has access to it? • Describe any benefits and/or compensation to the subjects. • Include the amount of time participation will take.

  15. IV. Adverse Events and Liability • If the risk to subjects is more than minimal, specify the steps to deal with unexpected, adverse events. • If risk to subjects is more than minimal, specify arrangements for handling liability of unexpected injuries (physical, psychological, social, legal, and economic). • If no liability plan is offered, state such. • NOTE: If the research includes no more than minimal risk and no liability plan is offered, insert, “The research does not pose any more than minimal risk to the participant beyond that of everyday life and therefore no liability plan is offered.” • NOTE:Any adverse events, unanticipated problems, injuries or deviations from the protocol MUSTbe reported to the HRPP immediately (TTU IRB 5.3).

  16. V. Consent Forms • Consent forms are not required for exempt reviews. • If the review is “Exempt” enter N/A (an information sheet would commonly be attached). • If the review is ‘Expedited’ or ‘Full Board’ enter “See Attachment C.” • Attach a consent form covering all the relevant elements of informed consent (See HRPP website for the template). • There are circumstances that exist where consent may be waived. In such cases, attach the blank Waiver of Written Consentform.

  17. Beyond the Proposal Format Page • Reference Page • Attachments or Appendices arranged in order per III. Procedures and labeled accordingly. • Recruiting Documentation (use templates) • Oral Scripts – Are you recruiting live? • Ads – TechAnnounce, newspaper, TV, radio • Internet – Social media, organization websites • Fliers • Emails, written communication • Information Sheet • Consent Form(s) • Assent Forms • Surveys, interview questions, etc.

  18. Recruiting Human Subjects • Incentive and Rewards • Subjects are reimbursed for their time; not paid for their participation • Coercion and Undue Influence • Coercion occurs when an overt or implicit threat of harm is intentionally presented by one person to another in order to obtain compliance. (An instructor recruiting members of his/her own class for research). • Undue influence often occurs through an offer of an excessive or inappropriate reward or other overture in order to obtain compliance. (Example: $150.00 for filling out a simple 5 minute questionnaire)

  19. Forms and Examples

  20. Forms and Examples

  21. IRB Review Process • Researchers (Principal Investigators) send proposals to the HRPP office (in person, Tech mail, email). • Typically a 3-5 day administrative process before the proposal is assigned and sent to an IRB reviewer. (NOTE: During peak months and semester breaks the process may take longer.) • Letter of acknowledgement to PI • Assigned a number • Scanned into the HRPP tracking system • Pre-screened by HRPP to cut down on reviewer time – (NOTE: The amount of time it takes to forward for review depends on how long it takes the PI to submit the revisions) • Once assigned the proposal, the IRB Reviewer has a minimum of 10 working days to begin the review process. • There is no IRB review time limit once the review process begins. All is dependent on communication and revisions between reviewer and PI. • Most revisions are handled by email. • Approval is granted by the IRB Reviewer and commonly the PI told they can begin collecting data. • A formal approval letter is sent to the researcher(s) by email.

  22. Research Understanding • The primary concern of the IRB is the protection of human subjects in research. • The HRPP/IRB does not and will not dictate how you conduct your research. • Your success is our success.

  23. Contact Information Rick Shupe Program Coordinator rick.shupe@ttu.edu Esther Lucey Program Coordinator esther.lucey@ttu.edu Donna Peters HRPP Manager donna.peters@ttu.edu 357 Administration Building 742-2064 hrpp@ttu.edu

  24. QUESTIONS?

  25. Bye now. Ya’ll come back. Thank you And Good Luck!

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