CITI Training Flashcards
(CITI Training)
What is the Belmont Report?
The Belmont Report (1979) provides the ethical framework for the federal regulations designed to protect human research subjects.
(CITI Training)
What are the three basic ethical principles outlined in the Belmont Report?
Respect for persons (i.e. autonomy and confidentiality);
beneficience (and nonmaleficience);
justice
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How should research participants’ autonomy be respected in enrolling in a study?
Informed consent - the study participants must be in control of what does or does not happen to them
(Comprehension; voluntariness)
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What ethical principle may be violated in only enlisting prisoners or the mentally ill in a research study?
What same ethical principle may be violated in only your friends for a potentially beneficial study?
Justice (in sample selection)
(CITI Training)
What is the difference between medical practice and medical research?
(Note: the line is blurry as there may be some frequent overlap in certain situations)
Practice - an intervention that is designed solely for enhanced well-being and has a likely / proven chance of success (e.g. an intervention, not placebo)
Research - an activity designed to test a provable hypothesis (note: experimental treatment does not necessarily mean research)
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How can the principle of beneficence be applied to a study employing human subjects?
Determining that the study has a maximization of benefits and a minimization of risks
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The Belmont Report’s principle of autonomy includes the following two points: That individuals should be treated as autonomous agents, and second, that…
persons with diminished autonomy are entitled to protection.
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Of the needs of which populations does the DHHS identify as groups that IRBs should be especially cognizant due to their higher risk of being coerced?
“Children, prisoners, individuals with impaired decision-making capacity, or economically or educationally disadvantaged persons”
(CITI Training)
What types of questions should be asked by IRBs to prevent group harms due to study results?
What are the possible harms that could result from my research? Is it possible that there will be harms (psychological, social, economic, etc.) to the group(s) of which my research subjects are members?
Are there any possible unintended consequences of my research such as stigmatization or discrimination?
Do the potential benefits of my research outweigh the harms to the subjects and to the population?
(CITI Training)
When must financial conflicts of interest be submitted to the IRB?
No later than the application for PHS funding (research proposal submission)
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What are the two primary types of conflict of interest?
Individual or institutional
(may also be financial or non-financial)
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What are some primary tenets of proper research according to the Nuremburg Code?
Voluntary consent;
benefits > risks;
must have some scientific merit
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What was the Beecher article (1966)?
A list of case studies showcasing unethical research in the post-WWII era
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When was the Tuskegee syphilis study?
1932 - 1972
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What happened in the WIllowbrook and Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital Studies?
Cognitively impaired individuals were infected with:
hepatitis - Willowbrook (1950 - 1970);
live cancer cells - JCDH (1963)