html5-img
1 / 13

Research ethics committees: Assessment and support

Research ethics committees: Assessment and support. Susan Bull Honorary Senior Lecturer, FMHS, University of Auckland Senior Researcher in the Ethics of Genomics and Global Health, University of Oxford Editor, GlobalHealthReviewers.org susan.bull@auckland.ac.nz. Research ethics committees.

jamil
Download Presentation

Research ethics committees: Assessment and support

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. Research ethics committees:Assessment and support Susan Bull Honorary Senior Lecturer, FMHS, University of Auckland Senior Researcher in the Ethics of Genomics and Global Health, University of Oxford Editor, GlobalHealthReviewers.org susan.bull@auckland.ac.nz

  2. Research ethics committees • Almost 50 years since first call for ethics committees to provide objective scrutiny of research protocols following widely publicised examples of unethical research • Role: protect research participants’ interests • Internationally: • Increasing numbers of committees being established • Committees being asked to review increasingly wide range of research • Evidence of effectiveness?

  3. Critiques of review systems ... • Effectiveness • Appropriateness and consistency of decision-making • Cursory or disproportionate review • Independence / conflict of interest / representation • Capacity (training, experience and resources) • Accountability • Transparency • In multi-centre research • Onerous logistics • Power imbalances and inconsistency between committees • Lack of communication

  4. Why seek consistency? • Arguments for consistency: • Researchers need to know where they stand • Communities need to know where they stand • Judgements should be consistent unless there is a morally significant difference between cases • RECs should be able to provide reasons for their decisions • What are the arguments against this? • the primary role of ethics committees is as places where researchers are subject to the scrutiny of a group of local people • committee members should use ‘their moral judgement’ • No two cases are ever really the same. Research is highly contextual.

  5. Supporting effective and appropriate ethical review • What might be appropriate standards against which to assess a committee’s performance? • How might performance be assessed? • Submission of test protocols • Reviews of committee processes and correspondence • Proxy outcome measures assessing factors such as • Resources and training • Processes for review and responding • Compliance with relevant guidance

  6. A research proposal • Qualitative study comparing ethics committees’, researchers’ and participants’ views of what constitutes effective ethical review • Do committees appropriately identify factors that participants consider important • Risks and comfort • Do they make appropriate recommendations regarding such factors • Specificity of responses • Policy development for issues such as inducements • Pilot in Asian and Latin American committees

  7. Praxis ... • Capacity building as a good in itself in the absence of agreed outcome measures and assessment • Development of local, regional and international training resources • Provision of free or cheap online training • Development of regional networks • Attempts to promote communication between committees

  8. Other sites include

  9. A research proposal • Global Health Reviewers is developing a number of specialised online courses in issues such as • Reviewing genomic research • Reviewing social science research • Reviewing cluster randomised trials • Reviewing epidemiological research • Designing an assessment of the value of the social science module for committees without specific expertise in this field (Taylor, H.A.; Kass, N.E.; Ali, J.; Sisson, S.; Bertram, A.; Bhan, A. (2012) Development of a research ethics knowledge and analytical skills assessment tool. Journal of Medical Ethics, 38(4), 236-242.)

  10. A challenge • Building effective online communities where committee members (and researchers) feel able to communicate • US IRB Forum is active and 7 years old • Newer and quieter forums for international audiences • GlobalHealthReviewers • MARC • MERETI

More Related