1 / 11

Itziar

Itziar. Itziar Larizgoitia, Abha Saxena, Philippe Michel. A reality & further questions. Seeking ethics committee approval for research can be challenging even for relatively simple studies occurring in single settings.

ira
Download Presentation

Itziar

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Itziar Itziar Larizgoitia, Abha Saxena, Philippe Michel

  2. A reality & further questions • Seeking ethics committee approval for research can be challenging even for relatively simple studies occurring in single settings. • Complicating factors such as multicentre studies and/or contentious research issues can challenge review processes, and conducting such studies internationally adds a further layer of complexity. Dovey S, Hall K, Makenham et. Al. Seeking ethical approval for an international study in primary care patient safety. Br J Gen Pract 2011; 61: 197-204

  3. More questions • When reviewing medical records, is patient privacy at stake? • When implementing a quality improvement activity are patients subject to any risk? • When evaluating a safety or quality intervention do health workers need to consent to it? • Do safety activities, quality improvement projects, patient safety research studies, pose different ethical questions? • Do they require a particular interpretation? And specific defences to prevent from these risks?

  4. Patient safety & ethics research committee Main ethics specialists • Nancy Kass, JHU • Carl Coleman, ethics research consultant WHO Steering group • Abha Saxena, Coordinator Global Health Ethics • Itziar Larizgoitia, Patient Safety Research • Carmen Audera-Lopez • Mobasher Butt • Danielle Whicher • Nittita Prasopa-Plaizier

  5. Contributors: ethics & research specialists • Gertrude Avortri Ghana • Anant Bhan , India • Sarah Edwards UK • Samia Hurst Switzerland • Janis Lazdins, Switzerland • Mondher Letaief , Tunisia • Osnat Levtzion-Korach Israel • Richard Lilford , UK • Josephine Ocloo , UK • Les Olson WHO ERC • Carlos Aibar , Spain • Ross Baker , Canada • David Bates , USA • Anant Bhan , India • Philippe Michel , France • Hans Van Delden, President, CIOMS • Susan Dovey , New Zealand • Ruth Faden , USA • Sev Fluss , CIOMS • Otmar Kloiber WMA • Rieke Van der Graaf , Netherlands • George Liu Australia • William Runciman , Australia, • Asavaroengchai Santawat , Thailand • Claudia Travassos , Brazil • Michel Valloton , CIOMS • Douglas Wassenaar, ZA • William Weeks, USA

  6. Agenda • Presentation of the session Itziar Larizgoitia • Ethical issues/ethical responses: an overview Abha Saxena • Group discussion over specific case studies • Debate and final conclusions facilitated by panelists Philippe Michel, Abha Saxena • Adjourn Itziar Larizgoitia

  7. www.patientsafety/research/en Thank you

  8. Providing neutral expert advice on the course of action Baker GR, Norton PG, Flintoft V, et.al. The Canadian Adverse Events Study: the incidence of adverse events among hospital patients in Canada CMAJ 2004; 170 (11): 1678-1686 This patient safety project involved the analysis for adverse events in a sample of 20 hospitals spread across five provinces in Canada. In this large and complex study, which involved the review of more than 3 700 medical charts, and where it would be possible to uncover some possible evidence of intentional harm or incompetence, the researchers set up a “safety committee” of recognized experts who agreed to provide back-up to the researchers and review data and make a decision about possibly informing the hospital or other relevant personnel about potential risks or unsafe providers. The researchers had to use the committee in one instance where a patient had been injured and provider actions were deemed worthy of further review.

  9. Reporting serious errors that can cause direct and severe harm to patients Greengold N, Shane R, Schneider P, et. al. The Impact of Dedicated Medication Nurses on the Medication Administration Error Rate: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Arch Intern Med, 2003:163:2359-2367 This patient safety project was implemented in two hospitals to understand if having a nurse dedicated to administering medications to patients would reduce medication administration errors. Four nursing units in each hospital were selected to participate in the project. The project staff recruited nurses. Informed consent was obtained from each nurse participants. The REC at each hospitals approved it. Once consent obtained, the nurses were randomly assigned to intervention or control group. Those in the intervention group attended a medication safety programme and for 2days/week for 12 weeks these nurses were exclusively responsible for administering medications to patients. Those in the control arm did not attend the programme and maintained their normal nursing activities. The nurses in the intervention arm were observed by project staff the two days a week. The nurses in the control arm were observed by the project staff the other three days of the week. The observers were all nurses or pharmacy technicians who attended an observer training session. They “recorded all aspects of drug retrieval, preparation, and administration” as well as “variations from safe medication practices”. If, during the course of their observations, the observer recognized an error that could cause harm to a patient, the observer was instructed to intervene and prevent the error from occurring.

  10. For Discussion Based on the ethical principles introduced at the session, identify some of the risks that research subject in this study might have faced in the absence of protection mechanisms, and discuss alternatives to minimize these risks. Please, consider the solution proposed by the study authors, discuss whether this solution could be effective in your own setting. Would you suggest any alternative solution?

  11. For Discussion Based on the ethical principles introduced at the session, Please consider Case Study 6 as described in the following page. Discuss whether and how researchers should intervene or report. Provide examples. Discuss the solution proposed by the study authors to facilitate nursing report, consider whether this solution will help protecting patients’ rights. Consider whether this solution could be applicable in your settings, and how. Would you have alternative suggestions?

More Related