Dealing with ethical issues (specifics) Flashcards
1
Q
How to deal with valid consent and the disadvantages.
A
- participants are formally asked to indicate their agreement to participate by, for example signing a document which contains comprehensive information concerning the nature and purpose of the research and their role in it.
- an alternative is to gain presumptive consent
- researchers must allow the right to withdraw.
DISADVANTAGES; - if a participant is given full information about a study this may invalidate the purpose of the study.
- Even if researchers have obtained valid consent, that does not guarantee that participants really do understand what they have let themselves in for.
- The problem with presumptive consent is that what people think that they will or will not mind can be different from actually experiencing it.
2
Q
What is presumptive consent?
A
- a method of dealing with lack of valid consent or deception, by asking a group of people who are similar to the participant whether they would agree to take part in the study.
- If this group of people consents to the procedures in the proposed study, it is presumed that the real participants would also agree.
3
Q
How to deal with deception, and the disadvantages of this?
A
- the need for deception should be approved by an ethics committee, weighing up benefits (of the study) against costs (to participants).
- participants should be fully debriefed after the study. This involves informing them of the true nature of the study.
- participants should be offered the opportunity to discuss any concerns they may have and to withhold their data from the study - a form of retrospective valid consent.
DISADVANTAGES: - cost; benefit decisions are flawed because they involve subjective judgements, and the costs and/or benefits are not always apparent until after the study.
- debriefing can’t turn the clock back- a participant may still feel embarrassed or have low self esteem.
4
Q
How to deal with risk of harm and the disadvantages.
A
- avoid any risks greater than experienced in everyday life. Stop the study if harm is suspected.
DISADVANTAGES- Harm may not be apparent at the time of the study and only judged later with hindsight.
5
Q
How to deal with confidentiality and the disadvantages.
A
- researchers should not record the names of any participants; they should use numbers or false names.
DISADVANTAGES; - it is sometimes possible to work out who the participants were using information that has been provided, for example the geographical location of a school. In practice, therefore confidentiality may not be possible.
6
Q
How to deal with privacy and disadvantages.
A
- Do not study anyone without their valid consent unless it is in a public place and public behaviour.
DISADVANTAGES- - there is no universal agreement about what constitutes a public place.
7
Q
Key terms; debriefing
A
- a post research interview designed to inform participants of the true nature of the study and to restore them to the state they were in at the start of the study.
- it may also be used to gain useful feedback about the procedures in the study.
- debriefing is not an ethical issue, it is a means of dealing with ethical issues.
8
Q
KEY TERMS; ethical guidelines
A
- a set of principles designed to help professionals behave honestly and with integrity.
9
Q
KEY TERMS; ethics committee
A
- a group of people within a research institution that must approve a study before it begins.
10
Q
KEY TERMS; right to withdraw.
A
- participants can stop participating in a study if they are uncomfortable in any way. This is especially important in cases where it was not possible to give valid consent.
- Participants should also have the right to refuse permission for the researcher to use any data they produced.