This month’s issue of Research Ethics Digest includes articles on the most controversial and challenging topics relevant to research ethics, including the role of trust in data sharing, ethical issues in environmental health research, evaluating minimal risk in pragmatic clinical trials, and much more.
Articles included:
The Research Ethics Digest Self-Study Program allows PRIM&R members to earn continuing education credits, which can be applied toward their CertifiedIRB Professional (CIP®) credential, CertifiedProfessional in IACUC Administration (CPIA®) credential recertification, or other professional credentials they may hold.
Articles included:
- Can Animal Data Translate to Innovations Necessary for a New Era of Patient-Centred and Individualised Healthcare? Bias in Preclinical Animal Research
- Decision Making and the IACUC: Part 1— Protocol Information Discussed at Full-Committee Reviews
- Developing an Online Orientation Resource for Users of Institutional Animal Housing Facilities
- The Upper Limits of Pain and Suffering in Animal Research
- Biomedical Data Sharing and Reuse: Attitudes and Practices of Clinical and Scientific Research Staff
- Data Rights and Responsibilities: A Human Rights Perspective on Data Sharing
- Research Stakeholders' Views on Benefits and Challenges for Public Health Research Data Sharing in Kenya: The Importance of Trust and Social Relations
- Sharing Public Health Research Data: Toward the Development of Ethical Data-Sharing Practice in Low- and Middle-Income Settings
- Ethical Issues in Environmental Health Research Related to Public Health Emergencies: Reflections on the GuLF STUDY
- Just Compensation: A No-Fault Proposal for Research-Related Injuries
- Participant Selection for Preventive Regenerative Medicine Trials: Ethical Challenges of Selecting Individuals at Risk
- The Ethics of Biosafety Considerations in Gain-of-Function Research Resulting in the Creation of Potential Pandemic Pathogens
- So Rare We Need to Hunt for Them: Reframing the Ethical Debate on Incidental Findings
- Adolescent Self-Consent for Biomedical Human Immunodeficiency Virus Prevention Research
- Clinical Research in Vulnerable Populations: Variability and Focus of Institutional Review Boards’ Responses
- Considerations in the Evaluation and Determination of Minimal Risk in Pragmatic Clinical Trials
- "The Keeping Is the Problem": A Qualitative Study of IRB-Member Perspectives in Botswana on the Collection, Use, and Storage of Human Biological Samples for Research
- Broad Consent for Research With Biological Samples: Workshop Conclusions
- Differences in Preferences for Models of Consent for Biobanks Between Black and White Women
- Fair Shares and Sharing Fairly: A Survey of Public Views on Open Science, Informed Consent and Participatory Research in Biobanking
- Is There Any Body Out There? A Call For a New Body of Law To Protect Individual Ownership Interests in Tissue Samples Used in Medical Research
- Public Comments on Proposed Regulatory Reforms That Would Impact Biospecimen Research: The Good, the Bad, and the Puzzling
The Research Ethics Digest Self-Study Program allows PRIM&R members to earn continuing education credits, which can be applied toward their CertifiedIRB Professional (CIP®) credential, CertifiedProfessional in IACUC Administration (CPIA®) credential recertification, or other professional credentials they may hold.