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Protection of Human Subjects in Research

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Title: Protection of Human Subjects in Research


1
Protection of Human Subjects in Research
Revised 10/12/04
  • Bentley College
  • Institutional Review Board (IRB)
  • Principal Investigator Training

BENTLEY
2
Composition of Bentley IRB
  • Institutional Official Robert Galliers, Provost
    Academic Vice President
  • IRB Administrator Mary Louise Pauli, Director of
    Sponsored Programs
  • IRB Chair, Anthony F. Buono, Professor of
    Management Sociology, Coordinator, Bentley
    Alliance for Ethics Social Responsibility
  • Federal regulations require a minimum of five
    members
  • Bentleys IRB has 10 Members
  • 7 senior full-time faculty from the various
    Business and AS Departments
  • 2 Staff members
  • One community member

BENTLEY
3
Bentleys Mission
  • We educate students to be leaders in business
    and related professions in ways that inspire
    students to be literate, articulate, ethical,
    creative and broad-minded with a rich campus
    life infused with intellectual, social and
    cultural diversity, community spirit, and a sense
    of civic responsibility valuing excellence in
    both scholarship and the classroom and
    achieving best practice in our respective
    fields.

BENTLEY
4
The Beginning Nuremberg
  • Nuremberg War Crimes Trials of Nazi doctors
  • Medical experiments were performed on thousands
    of concentration camp prisoners
  • In 1946, 23 physicians and administrators, many
    of whom were leading members of the German
    medical hierarchy, were indicted for crimes
    against humanity.
  • 16 were found guilty and imprisoned, and 7 were
    sentenced to death
  • A result was the Nuremberg Code (1947)
  • Ten principles that form the basis for ethics
    codes internationally

5
Nuremberg Code Key Tenets
  • Voluntary consent of human subjects is absolutely
    essential.
  • Animal experimentation should precede human
    experimentation.
  • All unnecessary physical and mental suffering and
    injury should be avoided
  • The degree of risk to participants should never
    exceed the "humanitarian importance of the
    problem."
  • All risk should be minimized through "proper
    preparations.
  • Participants should always be at liberty to
    withdraw from experiments.

6
Controversial Studies
  • Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital (1963)
  • Patients with chronic debilitating diseases were
    injected with live cancer cells without their
    knowledge.
  • The researchers were found guilty of fraud,
    deceit, and unprofessional conduct.
  • U.S. Public Health Service Tuskegee Syphilis
    Study (1934-1972)
  • Study began in 1934 as an examination of the
    natural history of untreated syphilis.
  • 400 black males participated without informed
    consent and were misinformed about procedures in
    the interest of research.
  • Although penicillin was found to be effective in
    treating syphilis in the 1940s, the study
    continued and the men were neither informed nor
    treated with the antibiotic.
  • Publication of study results in 1972 prompted
    public outrage, leading to a mandate to regulate
    all federally supported research involving human
    subjects.

7
Controversial Studies - 2
  • Willowbrook State School Study (1963-66)
  • At the NY State institution for mentally
    defective children, new entrants were
    deliberately injected with the hepatitis virus to
    examine the natural history of infectious
    hepatitis.
  • Researchers defended the study arguing that is
    was likely the children would have contacted the
    disease anyway due to the crowded and unsanitary
    conditions at the school.
  • Milgram Obedience to Authority Studies (1960s)
  • Being told that they were volunteering for a
    study to test the effect of negative
    reinforcement (punishment) on learning behavior,
    the volunteer teachers were unknowingly the
    subjects of the experiment
  • The teachers gave increasing electric shocks to
    learners who were confederates in the
    research study
  • Study raised significant questions about the
    ethics of creating psychological stress and
    tension in human subjects and the extent to which
    the search for knowledge should justify such
    costs to the participants.

8
Ethical Conduct of Research Background
  • 1962 - FDA legislation required formal consent
  • 1964 - Declaration of Helsinki focused on
    guidelines for medical research
  • 1965/6 - NIH Advisory Committee developed
    guidelines for ethical review of all NIH-funded
    research protocols by peers plus others at
    institution before experiment could begin
  • Included requirement for informed consent and
    assessment of risks and benefits
  • Start of Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)

9

Ethical Conduct of Research
  • National Research Act (1974)
  • Creation of National Commission for the
    Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and
    Behavioral Research
  • Commission delivers the Belmont Report (1979)
  • Recommendations implemented in the federal
    regulations known as the Common Rule (1981)

10
Principles of the Belmont Report
  • Respect for persons
  • obligation to treat individuals as autonomous
    agents able to chose for themselves
  • obligation to protect those with diminished
    capacity
  • Beneficence
  • obligation to not harm
  • obligation to maximize benefits and reduce harms
  • Justice
  • obligation to be fair and equitable
  • obligation to distribute benefits and burdens
    fairly

BENTLEY
11
Implementing the Principles of the Belmont
Report The Common Rule
  • Respect for persons
  • Informed consent
  • Beneficence
  • Minimization of possible risks, assessment of
    risks and benefits
  • Justice
  • Scrutiny of subject selection

12
The Common Rule for Department of Health and
Human Services 45 CFR 46
13
Bentley College
Institutional Review Board
Policies and Procedures (July 2001
Revised January 2003) Overview The
following policies and procedures are adopted by
Bentley College for oversight of research
by the Colleges Institutional Review
Board (IRB). They have been formulated in
response to consideration of 45 CFR 690,
the federal requirements known as the
Common Rule that may be examined in its
entirety at http//ohrp.osophs.dhhs.gov/hum
ansubjects/guidance/45cfr46.htm.
14
Definitions Research
  • Research means a systematic investigation,
    including research development, testing and
    evaluation, designed to develop or contribute to
    generalizable knowledge.
  • 45 CFR 46.102d

15
Definitions Human Subject
A living individual about whom an investigator
(whether professional or student) conducting
research obtains 1. data through intervention
or interaction with the individual, or 2.
identifiable private information 45
CFR 46.102f
16
Definition Minimal Risk
means that the probability and magnitude of
harm or discomfort anticipated in the research
are not greater in and of themselves than those
ordinarily encountered in daily life or during
the performance of routine physical or
psychological examinations or tests. 45
CFR 46.102i
17
General Considerations
  • Know, understand, and follow the relevant
    principles, regulations, policies and guidelines
  • Plan your research well before you start
  • Keep your obligations to human subjects in mind
    during the research
  • Anticipate and be empathic
  • Anticipate possible problems and/or complications
  • Try to put yourself in the participants place

18
General Considerations -2
  • Design your study to minimize risks and maximize
    benefits
  • Consider psychological, financial, social,
    employment, and educational risks
  • Dont ask more than you need to know
  • Design for confidentiality
  • Dont promise more than you can deliver
  • Have plans to deal with possible participant
    distress or injury
  • Maximize any direct benefits to the participants

19
General Considerations -3
  • Consider participant recruitment procedures
  • Is the process free of coercion?
  • Role conflicts? Power inequities?
  • Have you selected the best population with which
    to investigate your question (vs. the most
    convenient)?
  • Vulnerable population? Population that may
    benefit?
  • Is the design inclusive? Equitable?
  • Are inclusion and exclusion criteria clear and
    appropriate?

20
General Considerations -4
  • Consider informed consent procedures
  • Have subjects been fully informed of all relevant
    information and planned procedures?
  • Use of data? Who has access? Video or audio
    tapes?
  • Has the information been understood?
  • Presented appropriately? Ability to ask
    questions?
  • Are subjects able to give consent?
  • Cogently impaired? Underage? English-speaking?
  • Who will inform and witness the consent?

21
Remember Your Obligations
  • Informed consent is a process
  • Are there means to contact the researcher? Have
    you allowed for continuing exchange of
    information and questions?
  • Monitor for problems, adverse events
  • File with the IRB any necessary reports, requests
    for amendments, adverse events
  • Above all, respect those who volunteer to
    participate in your research study

22
Levels of IRB Review
  • Exempt status
  • Expedited review
  • Full review

23
Research that Qualifies for Exempt Status
  • No more than minimal risk
  • No identifiers Identities of subjects cannot be
    linked with the data or publicly available data
  • No medical treatments are involved
  • The research falls into one of the following
    categories
  • Educational settings, involving normal
    educational practices
  • Educational testing, surveys, interviews or
    observation of public behavior
  • Research involving public officials
  • Use of Existing data (no additional data to be
    gathered)
  • Demonstration projects (public benefit or service
    projects)
  • Taste and food quality evaluation and consumer
    acceptance

24
Exempt Review Categories
  • Detailed descriptions of exempt
  • review categories are available at
  • http//ohrp.osophs.dhhs.gov/humansubjects/guidance
    /45cfr46.htm46.101

25
If Exempt Status Applies
  • Request Exempt status on the Research Review
    Form, explaining why and citing appropriate
    regulatory details.
  • Exempt status will be confirmed if research
    fulfills the exemption criteria
  • While there is no further review for exempt
    status, the researcher should still follow the
    Belmont principles and Common Rule as appropriate

26
Research that Qualifies for Expedited Review
  • If no more than minimal risk is involved
  • If research activity falls solely within one or
    more of the following categories
  • Voice, video, digital or image recordings
  • Group of behavior characteristics
  • Previously approved research (continuing review)
  • Certain medical studies, including clinical
    studies of drugs and medical devices, blood
    samples, routine noninvasive procedures and
    prospective specimen collections (which are
    unlikely at Bentley) .
  • If there are minor changes (amendments) in
    previously approved research (during period
    approved)

27
Expedited Review Categories
  • Detailed descriptions of expedited review
  • categories are available at
  • http//ohrp.osophs.dhhs.gov/humansubjects/guidance
    /expedited98.htm

28
Criteria for IRB Full Review Approval of
Research (45 CFR 46.111)
  • Risks to subjects are minimized
  • Risks to subjects are reasonable relative to
    anticipated benefits
  • Selection of subjects is equitable
  • Informed consent will be sought and documented
  • Provisions for data monitoring for subjects
    safety
  • Provisions to protect privacy and maintain
    confidentiality
  • Additional safeguards are provided as
    appropriate if vulnerable
  • subjects are involved
  • The Bentley IRB Application asks that the
    information outlined above be provided by the
    Principal Investigator.

29
Valid Informed Consent
  • Fully informed
  • Information understood
  • Voluntary, free of coercion
  • Given by competent adult

30
For children and others not legally able to
consent
  • Permission from parent, guardian, or legal
    representative, and
  • Assent from the individual

31
Basic Elements of Informed Consent (45 CFR 46.116)
  • The subject is competent and can fully comprehend
    the information
  • Statement of the research - purpose, duration,
    procedures
  • Reasonably foreseeable risks or discomforts
  • Reasonably expected benefits to subject or others
  • Extent to which confidentiality will be
    maintained
  • Whom to contact if subject has questions
  • Statement that participation is voluntary no
    penalty or loss of benefits if decline to
    participate can withdraw at any time

32
Possible additional elements of informed consent
  • Risks not currently foreseeable
  • Circumstances under which subjects participation
    may be terminated by researcher
  • Any additional costs to subjects
  • Consequences of early withdrawal
  • Statement that researcher will tell subject of
    significant new findings discovered during course
    of study
  • Approximate number of subjects

33
Vulnerable Populations
  • Subjects likely to be vulnerable to coercion or
    undue influence
  • Children
  • Prisoners
  • Pregnant women
  • Mentally disabled persons
  • Economically or educationally disadvantaged
    persons
  • Employees? Students? Clients?

34
Research with Children
  • Subpart D 45 CFR 46.401-409 applies to research
    with children
  • "Assent" means a child's affirmative agreement to
    participate in research. Failure to object should
    not, absent affirmative agreement, be construed
    as assent. (45 CFR46.402b)
  • Risk/benefit determination

35
Risk/Benefit Categories for Research with
Children
  • Research not involving greater than minimal risk.
  • Research involving greater than minimal risk but
    presenting the prospect of direct benefit to the
    individual subjects.
  • Research involving greater than minimal risk and
    no prospect of direct benefit to individual
    subjects, but likely to yield generalizable
    knowledge about the subject's disorder or
    condition.
  • Research not otherwise approvable which presents
    an opportunity to understand, prevent, or
    alleviate a serious problem affecting the health
    or welfare of children.

36
Dual Role Issues
  • Individual as researcher and teacher/principal
  • Important to reduce potential for coercion of
    participants who are students or employees
  • Consider who will recruit students/employees
  • Will they be given an opportunity to decline?
  • If they choose not to participate, will their
    peers know? (e.g., If students do not
    participate, will they be given other tasks to
    complete while their peers are participating in
    the research?)

37
HIPAA Information(Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act)
  • Bentley is not a covered entity under HIPAA
  • Bentley researchers, however, may work with
    covered entities
  • PIs who work with health information need to
    complete the Statement on HIPAA PHI Use form
    see Mary Louise Pauli, IRB Administrator, for
    further information

38
For Additional IRB Information
  • Tony Buono, IRB Chair
  • AAC315 781-891-2529
  • abuono_at_bentley.edu
  • Mary Louise Pauli, IRB Administrator
  • LCC 270 781-891-2660
  • mpauli_at_bentley.edu
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