Research ethics Flashcards

1
Q

What are IRBs?

A
  • Committees that review research to ensure high ethics and to minimise subject harm
  • Canadian unis required to have it to get public funding
  • devel. in response to controversial studies
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2
Q

What are the 3 core principles of IRBs?

A
  • Respect for persons
  • concern for welfare
  • justice
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3
Q

What does respect for persons mean?

A
  • obligation to respect autonomy and protect those with developing, impaired, diminished autonomy
  • giving choice
  • seek free, informed and ongoing consent
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4
Q

What is informed consent?

A
  • given to subjects before the study
  • must explain all elements of study
  • physical or verbal
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5
Q

What is deception in research?

A
  • when subjects are not informed and don’t give consent
  • when people are misinformed/misled about purpose of study
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6
Q

How can one avoid abuse of power in research?

A
  • be aware of power dynamic
  • include withdrawal without penalty
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7
Q

What does concern for welfare mean?

A
  • minimize physical, mental and economic harm to participants
  • provide participants with enough info so they know risks/benefits of study
  • welfare of groups affected be research must be considered
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8
Q

What does the IRB say about minimizing harm?

A

Risk of harm should be no greater than the risks encountered in everyday life

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9
Q

What does privacy and confidentiality mean?

A
  • Privacy: what data is collected
  • Confidentiality: how is data stored
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10
Q

When is a study anonymous?

A

if researchers have no way of identifying a participant

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11
Q

How should researchers ensure privacy and confidentiality?

A
  • store data with as many protections as possible
  • don’t share data with anyone not approved by IRB
  • destroy data after certain amount of time
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12
Q

What does justice mean?

A
  • obligation to treat people fairly and equitably
  • no segment of pop is unduly burdened by harms of research/ denied benefits
  • participants must be based on inclusion criteria justified by research question
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13
Q

What is data mining, p-hacking, harking?

A

ways of making the data fit a researchers objectives, agenda

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14
Q

What is self-plagiarism?

A

taking verbatim from your own writing after it has been published

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15
Q

What is Data Slicing?

A

Writing more than one paper from a single data set with only minor changes

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