The articles included in this month's issue of Research Ethics Digest offer new discussion of challenging and controversial topics related to research ethics, including publication and reporting issues, an analysis of the incident reports sent to the Office for Human Research Protections, issues relevant to research with animals, IRBs and community partners, and further topics.
Articles included:
- Ethical Use of Animal Models in Musculoskeletal Research
- ACLAM Position Statement on Pain and Distress in Research Animals
- Animal Study Registries: Results from a Stakeholder Analysis on Potential Strengths, Weaknesses, Facilitators, and Barriers
- The Devil is in the Details: Incomplete Reporting in Preclinical Animal Research
- Considerations for the Design and Execution of Protocols for Animal Research and Treatment to Improve Reproducibility and Standardization: “DEPART Well-Prepared and ARRIVE Safely”
- ACLAM Position Statement on Reproducibility
- Introduction to the Article Collection ‘Translation in Healthcare: Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications’
- Public Responses to the Sharing and Linkage of Health Data for Research Purposes: A Systematic Review and Thematic Synthesis of Qualitative Studies
- Sponsorship, Conflict of Interest, Risk of Bias, and Reporting of Participant's Flow and Baseline Demographic Information in Studies Applicable to the Federal Law to Post the Results in Clinicaltrials.Gov
- Why Most Clinical Research is Not Useful
- Randomised Placebo-Controlled Trials of Surgery: Ethical Analysis and Guidelines
- Incident Reports and Corrective Actions Received by OHRP
- Measuring Informed Consent Capacity in an Alzheimer's Disease Clinical Trial
- Recontacting Pediatric Research Participants for Consent When They Reach the Age of Majority
- Evolving the IRB: Building Robust Review for Industry Research
- Institutional Review Board Training When Patients and Community Members Are Engaged As Researchers
- Engaging Institutional Review Boards in Developing a Brief, Community-Responsive Human Subjects Training for Community Partners
The Research Ethics Digest Self-Study Program allows PRIM&R members to earn continuing education credits, which can be applied toward their Certified IRB Professional (CIP®) credential, Certified Professional in IACUC Administration (CPIA®) credential recertification, or other professional credentials they may hold.