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Chapter 3 Research Ethics and Philosophies

Chapter 3 Research Ethics and Philosophies. Introduction. Every social scientist needs to consider how to practice their discipline ethically.

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Chapter 3 Research Ethics and Philosophies

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  1. Chapter 3Research Ethics and Philosophies

  2. Introduction • Every social scientist needs to consider how to practice their discipline ethically. • Whenever we interact with other people as social scientists we must give paramount importance to the rational concerns and emotional needs that will shape their responses to our actions. • It is here that ethical research practice begins, with the recognition that our research procedures involve people who deserve as much respect for their well-being as we do for ours.

  3. Historical Background • Formal procedures for the protection of participants in research grew out of some widely publicized abuses. • The Nuremberg War Crime Trials and Hitler’s experiments • The Tuskegee syphilis experiments in the 1930’s • Milgram’s obedience experiments – Yale 1960 • Out of these and other experiments that violated human rights, the U.S. created a National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research.

  4. Ethics • Three basic ethical principles for the protection of human subjects were established: • Respect for persons: Treating persons as autonomous agents and protecting those with diminished autonomy. • Beneficence: Minimizing possible harms and maximizing benefits. • Justice: Distributing benefits and risks of research fairly.

  5. Ethics, cont. • Federal regulations require that every institution that seeks federal funding for biomedical or behavioral research on human subjects have an institutional review board (IRB) that reviews research proposals. • IRBs at universities and other agencies apply ethics standards that are set by federal regulations but can be expanded or specified by the IRB itself (Sieber 1992:5, 10).

  6. Ethics, cont. • The American Sociological Association (ASA), and The American Psychological Association (APA) like other professional social science organizations, have adopted, for practicing researchers, ethics guidelines that are more specific than the federal regulations. • Professional organizations may also review complaints of unethical practices when asked. • Problem: most codes apply to standards of practice, not research

  7. Ethical Principles Achieving Valid Results.Commitment to achieving valid results is the necessary starting point for ethical research practice. Honesty and Openness. The scientific concern with validity requires that scientists be open in disclosing their methods and honest in presenting their findings.

  8. Ethical Principles, cont. • Protecting Research Participants.The Code’s standards concerning the treatment of human subjects include federal regulations and ethics guidelines emphasized by most professional social science organizations: • Research should cause no harm to subjects. • Participation in research should be voluntary, and therefore subjects must give their informed consent to participate in the research. • Researchers should fully disclose their identity. • Anonymity and/or confidentiality must be maintained for individual research participants unless it is voluntarily and explicitly waived. • Benefits from a research project should outweigh any foreseeable risks.

  9. Ethical Principles, cont. • Avoid harming research participants.Although this standard may seem straightforward, it can be difficult to interpret in specific cases and harder yet to define in a way agreeable to all social scientists. • Does it mean that subjects should not be at all harmed psychologically as well as physically? • That they should feel no anxiety or distress whatever during the study or only after their involvement ends?

  10. Ethical Principles, cont. • Obtain informed consent. To be informed, consent must be given by persons who are competent to consent, have consented voluntarily, are fully informed about the research, and have comprehended what they have been told (Reynolds 1979). • Avoid deception in research, except in limited circumstances.Deception occurs when subjects are misled about research procedures to determine how they would react to the treatment if they were not research subjects.

  11. Ethical Principles, cont. • Maintain privacy and confidentiality. Procedures to protect each subject’s privacy such as locking records and creating special identifying codes must be created to minimize the risk of access by unauthorized persons. • The Benefitsoutweigh the risks – don’t always know the risks

  12. The Uses of Research • Scientists must also consider the uses to which their research is put. • Although many scientists believe that personal values should be left outside the laboratory, some feel that it is proper—even necessary—for scientists to concern themselves with the way their research is used.

  13. Conclusions • The extent to which ethical issues are a problem for researchers and their subjects varies dramatically with the type of research design. • Survey research, in particular, creates few ethical problems. • Some experimental studies have put people in harms way and for some have resulted in death.

  14. Conclusions, cont. • Ultimately, these decisions about ethical procedures are not just up to you, as a researcher, to make. • Your university’s IRB sets the human subjects protection standards for your institution and may even require that you submit your research proposal to them for review. • So you need to review the human subjects guidelines of professional association in your field, consult your university’s procedures for the conduct of research with human subjects and then proceed accordingly.

  15. historical uses of unethical research contributed toward present values and ethics in research • unethical Nazi experiment, the Stanley Milgram's experiment, the Tuskegee Syphilis study, the Willowbrook study, and the Laud Humphrey's "Tearoom Sex" study

  16. led to the creation of the Belmont Report and the Institutional Review Board (IRB) which were formed to protect human subjects involved in research. (more later)

  17. The National Research Act was enacted by the 93rd United States Congress. It created the National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research to oversee and regulate the use of human experimentation in medicine.

  18. It was partly a response to the infamous Tuskegee syphilis study. • The act was signed into law on July 12, 1974.[1]

  19. The Belmont Report attempts to summarize the basic ethical principles identified by the Commission* in the course of its deliberations. (1976-78)

  20. The Belmont Report is one of the leading works concerning ethics and health care research. It allows for the protection of participants in clinical trials and research studies[3] .

  21. Unethical Historical studies • research abuse by Nazi doctors during World War II • sixteen German physicians practiced unethical medical experiments on Jews, gypsies, and political prisoners. • In 1947, out of this horror, came the Nuremberg Code

  22. Under this code, the physicians were convicted for crimes against humanity. • Stanley Milgram's experiment • Milgram was a psychologist from Yale University. He conducted a study on the conflict between obedience toward authority and ones personal conscience.

  23. those accused at the World War II, Nuremberg War Criminal trials • Their defense was based on "obedience" and that they were just following their supervisor's orders. • how people reacted toward an authority figure while giving an apparent electrical shock

  24. so called "teachers" (who were unknown subjects of the experiment) were recruited by Milgram. • Asked to administer an electrical shock of increased intensity to a "learner" for each mistake he made during the experiment.

  25. fictitious story given to these "teachers" was that the experiment was exploring effects of punishment (for incorrect responses) on learning behavior. • "teacher" was not aware that the "learner" in the study was an actor

  26. When the "learner" gave an incorrect response, the volt would increase by 15 volts intervals. • Some teachers went to the maximum of 450 volts • At times the "teacher" questioned the experiment but continued

  27. study raised many questions about how the subjects could bring themselves to administer such high shocks • More important to our interests are the ethical issues it raised about research

  28. 1. What right does a researcher have to expose subjects to such stress? • 2. What activities should be or not be allowed in marketing research? • 3. Does the search for knowledge always justify such "costs" to subjects? • 4. Who should decide such issues?

  29. 1932, the Tuskegee Syphilis Study • 40-year project administered by the US Public Health Service in Macon County, Alabama. • American Government promised 400 men free treatment for ‘bad blood’

  30. The treatment was never given to the men and was in fact withheld. • The sample was made up of poor African American men who were told that they had "bad blood” that had syphilis • did not receive standard treatment for syphilis

  31. The men in the study were not informed of the research design and it's risks to them. • symbolized the medical misconduct and blatant disregard for human rights that takes place in the name of science

  32. They were not mad scientists; rather they were government physicians, respected men of science • The study's unethical features did not come to light until 1972 • over one hundred of the infected men died and others suffered from serious syphilis related conditions

  33. a class action civil suit of $1.8 billion was filed against those who were involved in the study. The case never came to trial. Each participant only received $37,500 in damages, and the* heirs of the deceased received $15,000.

  34. 1963 to 1966, the Willowbrook Study • involved a group of children diagnosed with mental retardation, who lived at the Willowbrook State Hospital in Staten Island, New York • children were deliberately infected with the hepatitis virus

  35. Investigators defended the injections by pointing out that the vast majority of them acquired the infection anyway while at Willowbrook, and it would be better for them to be infected under carefully controlled research conditions.

  36. study's purpose was to study the history of the disease when left untreated • and later to assess the effects of gamma globulin as a therapeutic intervention

  37. study generated a variety of concerns, such as the deliberate infection of the children and the attempts to convince the* parents to enroll them in the study in exchange for admission to the hospital (which was deliberately short of space).

  38. the mid-1960s, Laud Humphreys – Tea Room Trade • a sociologist, he recognized that the public and the law enforcement held stereotypical beliefs about men who committed impersonal sexual acts with one another in public restrooms

  39. "Tearoom sex", as fellatio in public restrooms is called, accounted for the majority of homosexual arrests in the US • For his PhD dissertation at Washington University, Humphreys decided that is was important for

  40. society to gain a better understanding of who these men were and what motivated them to seek quick, impersonal sexual gratification. • answer this question by means of participant observation and structured interviews

  41. Humphreys stationed himself in "tearooms" and offered to serve as a "watchqueen“ • He observed hundreds of acts and gained the confidence of some of the men he observed

  42. Humphreys secretly followed some men and recorded the license numbers on their vehicles

  43. Humphreys showed up at their private homes and claimed to be a health service interviewer. He asked them questions about their marital status, race, job, and other personal questions.

  44. Humphreys' findings destroyed many stereotypes. He found that 54% of the men were married, and 38% were neither bisexual nor homosexual. Most of the men were successful, well educated, economically stable, and highly praised in the community.

  45. Only 14% of the men he observed were homosexual and part of the gay community (http://web.missouri.edu). • Humphreys' research was administered in the mid- 1 960's before the IRB was in existence

  46. So what became of all this in regards to ethical research? • In 1979, the federal government developed regulations of ethical principals underlying the current regulations and standards that are contained in the Belmont Report.

  47. It was the capstone of the National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research. It outlines the ethical principals upon which the ethics of a research study are evaluated in the United States.

  48. The Belmont Report embodies the moral consensus upon which stand our present US Federal regulations governing the ethics of human subjects research conduct with Federal funds from the majority of Federal agencies.

  49. Belmont Report's requirements matured into the Institutional Review Board (IRB) system that we have today. • This goals is accomplished by having the IRB assure that the following requirements are satisfied:

  50. 1. risk to subjects are minimized • 2. risk to subjects are reasonable in relation to anticipated benefits, • 3. selection of subjects is equitable, i.e. fair. informed consent is sought form each subject or his/her legally authorized representative,

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