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Ethical and Professional Issues in Epidemiology

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Title: Ethical and Professional Issues in Epidemiology


1
Ethical and Professional Issues in Epidemiology
  • Public Health 2610
  • November 18, 2002
  • Lowell E. Sever

2
  • We are all responsible for all.
  • - Dostoevsky -

3
Outline of Points to be Considered
  • Ethical issues in epidemiology
  • Ethics and ethical principles
  • Ethical obligations to research subjects
  • Ethics of randomized controlled trials
  • Professional issues in epidemiology
  • Data ownership and sharing
  • Public health and bioterrorism CDC, anthrax and
    smallpox

4
Ethics and Epidemiology
  • There is almost no step in the research process
    in epidemiology in which ethical issues do not
    exist.

5
Ethics and Epidemiology
  • Ethics for epidemiologists involves an interplay
    between the model of public health (supporting
    the public good) and the model of medicine
    (supporting the good of the individual).

6
Ethics
  • In its descriptive sense, the term ethics can be
    used to refer to the set of rules, principles,
    values and ideals of a particular group of people
    (morals).
  • In its analytic sense, the term ethics can be
    used to refer to the systematic study of moral
    concepts and theories (moral philosophy).

7
Ethical PrinciplesThe Georgetown Mantra
  • Respect for autonomy - Protection of the ability
    of persons to act as autonomous agents
  • Non-maleficence - Protection of persons from harm
  • Beneficence - Provision of benefits or assistance
  • Justice - Giving each person their due

8
Core Values, Duties and Virtues
  • Core values underlie the mission and purpose of
    epidemiology and are more restricted than general
    ethical principles.
  • Duties (obligations) pertain to various parties
    such as research participants, society, sponsors,
    employers and professional colleagues.
  • Virtues are character traits (motivational
    factors) that dispose us to act in ways that
    achieve good things. Virtuous traits include such
    things as humility, fidelity, justice, patience,
    industry and veracity.

9
The New Public Health
  • The new public health a new morality?
  • Epidemiology governing by numbers
  • The healthycitizen
  • Risk discourse and the environment
  • The healthy city
  • The duty to participate

10
Epidemiology governing by numbers
  • The emergence of epidemiology
  • The construction of epidemiological facts
  • Quantification and epidemiological truths
  • Contested knowledges
  • Epidemiology and risk discourse
  • Self and other in epidemiological discourses

11
Integration of Public Health Ethical Problems
into Public Health and Bioethics
  • In programs designed to promote health and
    prevent disease and injury (e.g. what is the
    responsibility of individuals to live healthy
    lives?)
  • In methods used to reduce or eliminate risk (e.g.
    what level or degree of risk is socially
    acceptable?)

12
Integration of Public Health Ethical Problems
into Public Health and Bioethics
  • In epidemiological research (e.g. is the need for
    informed consent in the biomedical model of
    research the appropriate model to use for public
    health research?)
  • In the topic area of socioeconomic disparities
    (e.g. to what extent should the field take a
    public stand on important policy issues?)

13
IRB Protocol Review Questions - I
  • Does the protocol have scientific value?
  • Does the protocol have scientific validity?
  • Does the study have a valid scientific design and
    yet pose an inappropriate risk for subjects?
  • Are risks to subjects minimized?

14
IRB Protocol Review Questions - II
  • Are the risks to subjects reasonable in relation
    to anticipated benefits, if any, to subjects and
    the importance of the knowledge that may
    reasonably be expected to result?
  • Is the selection of subjects equitable?
  • Are additional safeguards in place for subjects
    likely to be vulnerable to coercion or undue
    influence?

15
IRB Protocol Review Questions - III
  • Will informed consent be obtained from research
    subjects or their legally authorized
    representatives?
  • Is there adequate provision for monitoring the
    data collected to ensure the safety of subjects?
  • Are there adequate provisions to protect the
    privacy of subjects and to maintain the
    confidentiality of data?

16
Privacy
  • Refers to freedom of the person to choose for
    himself or herself the time and circumstances
    under which and, most importantly, the extent to
    which, his or her attitudes, beliefs, behavior,
    and opinions are to be shared with or withheld
    from others.

17
Confidentiality
  • Refers to managing private information when a
    subject shares private information (confides in)
    an investigator, the investigator is expected to
    refrain from sharing this information with others
    without the subjects authorization or some other
    justification.

18
Ethics of Randomized Controlled Trials
  • In order for randomized controlled trials to be
    ethical, there must be genuine uncertainty about
    the comparative therapeutic merits of each
    treatment arm, i.e., a state of equipoise must
    exist.
  • A data monitoring committee is commonly employed
    to periodically review the evidence emerging from
    a clinical trial and to stop the trial when there
    is decisive evidence in favor of one treatment.

19
Ethics of Randomized Controlled Trials
  • Often require the balancing of potential benefits
    to individual patients with those that may be
    gained by future patients or society as a whole.
  • Tension may exist between the physicians
    responsibility to act in the best interest of
    each individual patient and the societal need to
    acquire new knowledge by randomizing patients
    according to a standard protocol.

20
Ethics Guidelines for Epidemiologists(The
American College of Epidemiology)
  • The professional role of epidemiologists
  • Minimizing risks and protecting the welfare of
    research participants
  • Providing benefits
  • Ensuring a equitable distribution of risks and
    benefits
  • Protecting confidentiality and privacy
  • Obtaining the informed consent of participants
  • Submitting proposed studies for ethical review

21
Ethics Guidelines for Epidemiologists(The
American College of Epidemiology)
  • Maintaining public trust
  • Avoiding conflicting interests and partiality
  • Communicating ethical requirements to colleagues,
    employers, and sponsors and confronting
    unacceptable conduct
  • Obligations to communities
  • Reporting results
  • Public health advocacy
  • Respecting cultural diversity

22
Public Health, Epidemiology Bioterrorism
Betsy Foxman
  • Public health infrastructure, disease detection
    and intervention strategies, have been remarkably
    effective in preventing all of us from becoming
    ill from many of the diseases of just a
    generation ago measles, polio, and smallpox.
    Unfortunately, these successes have made public
    health an easy target for cuts in government
    spending.

23
Public Health, Epidemiology Bioterrorism
Betsy Foxman
  • Disease surveillance and outbreak investigation
    and containment are a cornerstone of public
    health. Establishing public health
    infrastructure will not only protect us from the
    current threats but prepare us for future events.
    Stockpiling cipro and smallpox vaccine will not
    help if god forbid we face chemical attacks
    or something else currently unthinkable.

24
Public Health, Epidemiology Bioterrorism
Betsy Foxman
  • As we face the growing possibility of a
    recession with an administration that believes
    tax cuts are the way to stimulate the economy,
    our state and local agencies will be increasingly
    be forced to make very hard choices. If public
    health agencies chose to put most resources into
    counter bioterrorism activities other public
    health activities will suffer, such as their
    fight against HIV/AIDS and other sexually
    transmitted diseases, infant mortality and
    vaccine preventable infections.

25
Public Health, Epidemiology Bioterrorism
Betsy Foxman
  • A well trained and well equipped public health
    workforce is essential to protecting everyones
    health and to ensuring that we have a
    knowledgeable resource to give us both the good
    and bad news about threats to our health.
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