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Protecting Research Participants

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... identifies two essential protections for human participants in medical research: ... responsible for independent review of medical research in the US. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Protecting Research Participants


1
Protecting Research Participants A Time for
Change National Bioethics Advisory Commission
2
PRELIMINARY POINTS I
  • Therapy df. A class of activities designed
    solely to benefit an individual or the members of
    a group. It may take several forms treatment
    of a disease diagnostic procedures or
    preventative measures.
  • Research df. A class of scientific activities
    designed to develop or contribute to
    generalizable knowledge.
  • The general justification for human research is
    that a human organism responds to biomedical
    interventions or other stimuli in ways that could
    not be predicted on the basis of studies with
    human or nonhuman animals.

3
TWO KINDS OF RESEARCH
  • Clinical research df. Research that is
    combined with the diagnosis, treatment, or
    prevention in the research subjects
    themselves. It is research aimed directly
    toward discovering better methods of diagnosing
    or treating the condition from which human or
    animal patients are suffering or toward
    preventing disease in susceptible humans or
    animals. For instance, when a polio vaccine is
    tested on subjects susceptible to polio.
  • Nonclinical research df. Research that is
    unrelated or not directly related to an illness
    or susceptibility of the subjects involved in
    the research. For instance, a drug is tested
    on healthy subjects to see how long it remains in
    the system.

4
TWO ESSENTIAL PROTECTIONS
  • The National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC)
    identifies two essential protections for human
    participants in medical research
  • 1. Independent review of research to assess
    risks and potential benefits of research.
  • 2. The opportunity for people to voluntarily
    and knowledgeably decide whether to participate
    in a particular research protocol a protocol
    here is a detailed plan of a medical experiment,
    treatment, or procedure.

5
RESPECTING RESEARCH PARTICIPANTS
  • NBAC People should participate in research only
    when the study addresses important questions, its
    risks are justifiable, and an individuals
    participation is voluntary and informed.
  • NBAC Research must respect the autonomy of
    participants, must be fair in both conception and
    implementation, and must maximize potential
    benefits while minimizing potential harms.

6
INDEPENDENT REVIEW
  • NBAC No one should participate in research
    unless independent review concludes that the
    risks are reasonable in relation to the potential
    benefits.
  • The Institutional Review Board (IRB) is primarily
    responsible for independent review of medical
    research in the US.
  • Independent review improves the likelihood that
    decisions are made free from inappropriate
    influences that could distort the central task of
    evaluating risks and potential benefits.
  • Independent reviewers should not have a financial
    interest in the research being reviewed.

7
LIMITATION OF RISKS
  • The NBAC says that there should be some
    limitation on the amount of social and physical
    risk that can be imposed, regardless of the
    participants willingness to participate or the
    monetary (or other) enticement being offered.
  • The Commission also says that the possibility of
    some benefit from one element of a study should
    not be used to justify otherwise unacceptable
    elements of research whose potential benefits, if
    any, accrue solely to society at large.
  • If aspects of a study present unacceptable
    risks, protocols should not be approved until
    these elements are eliminated.

8
IRBs AND BENEFITS AND RISKS
  • IRBs (Institutional Review Boards) are key to the
    overseeing of medical research and to determining
    how to assess potential benefits and risks of
    such research, and how to maximize benefits and
    minimize risks.
  • One problem is that the nature of research
    changes constantly, and so notions of what
    constitutes acceptable risks and potential
    benefits can be challenged by the changing nature
    of that research.

9
VOLUNTARY INFORMED CONSENT
  • For the participation of a subject in medical
    research to be appropriate the subject must be
    informed about the nature of the research in
    which he or she will participate, and so the
    nature of any potential risks to and benefits for
    the subject that participation in the research
    may involve.
  • For the participation of a subject in medical
    research to be appropriate the subjects
    participation must be fully voluntary as the
    freely made decision to participate is informed
    by the nature of the research.

10
VULNERABILITY AND INCLUSIVE RESEARCH I
  • NBAC Vulnerable individuals need additional
    protection in research . . . but should not be
    arbitrarily excluded from research for this
    reason alone.
  • NBAC The response, whenever possible, should
    not be to exclude people from research, but to
    change the design of the research so that it does
    not create situations in which people are
    unnecessarily harmed.
  • The reason not to exclude certain people from
    research is that, if they are excluded, then the
    results of the research may not apply to
    everyone, and may only help part of the
    population.

11
VULNERABILITY AND INCLUSIVE RESEARCH II
  • A person may be vulnerable because of intrinsic
    characteristics of the person. For instance,
    children or those with certain mental or
    developmental disorders.
  • A person may be vulnerable because of his or her
    circumstances. For instance, a person who is
    institutionalized or a woman with small children.
  • A vulnerable person of any kind must not be
    exploited by medical researchers.

12
VULNERABILITY AND INCLUSIVE RESEARCH III
  • NBAC Research participants must be treated
    equally and with respect.
  • Research then should be designed, if possible,
    to encourage the participation of all groups
    while protecting their rights and welfare.
  • NBAC Ethical research does not avoid
    complexity. Rather, it acknowledges the full
    range and realities of the human condition.

13
COMPENSATING FOR HARMS
  • Justice requires that any subjects who are harmed
    in medical research be cared for and compensated.
  • The fact that a person who is harmed freely chose
    to participate in the research does nothing to
    affect the need to care for and compensate that
    person.
  • NBAC It should always be remembered that it is
    a privilege for any researcher to involve human
    participants in his or her research.

14
RESPONSIBLE OVERSIGHT I
  • The NBAC says that, to be both effective and
    comprehensive, an oversight system must cover
    both federally sponsored and privately sponsored
    research.
  • NBAC Participants should be protected from
    avoidable harm, whether the research is publicly
    or privately funded.
  • Responsible oversight of private research should
    cover both domestic and international research.

15
RESPONSIBLE OVERSIGHT II
  • The NBAC says that, in spite of differences
    between government agencies, universities, and
    private companies, there should be uniform
    protections for medical research participants.
  • This does not mean, however, that research
    protections should be so rigid that cannot be
    applied in widely different research settings or
    to emerging areas of research.

16
RESEARCH RESPONSIBILITY AND EDUCATION
  • NBAC the ethical obligation to protect
    participants lies first with researchers, their
    sponsors, and the IRBs that review their
    research.
  • NBAC merely adhering to a set of rules and
    regulations does not fulfill the duty of
    researchers to protect participants in research.
    Rather, it is accomplished by acting within a
    culture of concern and respect for research
    participants.
  • NBAC Education is the foundation of the
    oversight system and is essential to protecting
    research participants.
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