Research ethics Flashcards
What are IRBs?
- 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
What are the 3 core principles of IRBs?
- Respect for persons
- concern for welfare
- justice
What does respect for persons mean?
- obligation to respect autonomy and protect those with developing, impaired, diminished autonomy
- giving choice
- seek free, informed and ongoing consent
What is informed consent?
- given to subjects before the study
- must explain all elements of study
- physical or verbal
What is deception in research?
- when subjects are not informed and don’t give consent
- when people are misinformed/misled about purpose of study
How can one avoid abuse of power in research?
- be aware of power dynamic
- include withdrawal without penalty
What does concern for welfare mean?
- 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
What does the IRB say about minimizing harm?
Risk of harm should be no greater than the risks encountered in everyday life
What does privacy and confidentiality mean?
- Privacy: what data is collected
- Confidentiality: how is data stored
When is a study anonymous?
if researchers have no way of identifying a participant
How should researchers ensure privacy and confidentiality?
- 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
What does justice mean?
- 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
What is data mining, p-hacking, harking?
ways of making the data fit a researchers objectives, agenda
What is self-plagiarism?
taking verbatim from your own writing after it has been published
What is Data Slicing?
Writing more than one paper from a single data set with only minor changes