Research Ethics Flashcards
What is the Declaration of Helsinki?
A statement of ethical principles for medical research involving human subjects developed by the WMA
What are the regulatory bodies of human research in the UK?
- NHS: National Research Ethics Service (NRES)
- non-NHS: local Research Ethics Committee (REC), in StA its UTREC
What is the 4 criteria of consent?
- patient must have capacity
- patient must give consent voluntarily
- patient must be informed
- consent must be continuing
What is the first Nuremberg Code?
the voluntary consent of the subject is absolutely essential
What does the Declaration of Helsinki add to the first Nuremberg Code?
- each potential subject should be adequately informed of relevant aspects of the study such as aims and methods
- subject should be informed on the right to refuse to participate/withdraw consent at any time
- subject should be informed by physician of which aspects of care are related to research
- informed consent must be sought for research using identifiable human material/data
What are things to look out for when taking informed consent?
- the participant feeling pressured into agreeing
- the problem of incentives
- sufficient information
- vulnerable patients
What were the ethical issues raised in the Tuskegee Syphilis Trials?
- took advantage of 600 african-american men
- no informed consent - told they were being treated for bad blood
- was meant to be for 6 months but lasted 40 years
- incentives given: free medical exams, meals, burial insurance
- regular examination but none of the subjects were treated for the disease
What were the ethical issues raised by the Guatemalan STD trials?
- US gov experimented on 5000+ Guatemalan soldiers, prisoners, people with psychiatric disorders, orphans and prostitutes
- exposed them to gonorrhoea, syphilis or chancroid.
- No evidence consent was sought.
What were the ethical issues raised from the Henrietta lacks case?
- cells from Henrietta’s cervix where cultured in vitro
- cells were shipped across the world and used in medical research
- all done without her knowledge/consent
Why is there a need for transparency in publication ethics?
- authorship: someone can put their name on research but only contributed very little so now they put names and their role on a paper
- conflict of interest: constitutes a problem when competing interests could unduly influence one’s responsibility in publication process. eg, financial ties, personal relationships, religious or political beliefs etc
What are the arguments for/against research using animals?
- benefits
- model (animals are very different from humans)
- sentience (ability for animals to feel and experience emotions)
- value
- moral agency (ability to make moral judgement)
- spiritual/religious potential
- human achievement
How does the Home Office determine if they should grant a project licence to test on animals?
- weight the likely adverse effects on the animal against the benefit likely to result of the programme.
- local animal ethics committees review and monitor all eligible research using ASPA/HO guidelines
- Site license
- personal licence
- project licence
What are the three principles governing the use of animals in research?
3 Rs:
- replacement: alternative technologies
- reduction: better study design to allow for use of fewer animals
- refinement: eg. better housing, minimise pain, improve welfare