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Back to the Rough Ground Community participation and ethics guidance for HIV prevention trials

http://www.hptn.org/ResearchEthics/HPTN_Ethics_Guidance.htm. Back to the Rough Ground Community participation and ethics guidance for HIV prevention trials. Kathleen M. MacQueen, PhD, MPH Family Health Intenational June 2003. HPTN Ethics Guidance for Research. Kathleen M. MacQueen (FHI)

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Back to the Rough Ground Community participation and ethics guidance for HIV prevention trials

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  1. http://www.hptn.org/ResearchEthics/HPTN_Ethics_Guidance.htm Back to the Rough GroundCommunity participation and ethics guidance for HIV prevention trials Kathleen M. MacQueen, PhD, MPH Family Health Intenational June 2003

  2. HPTN Ethics Guidance for Research • Kathleen M. MacQueen (FHI) • Jeremy Sugarman (Duke University) • On behalf of the HPTN Ethics Working Group • Quarraisha Abdool Karim (Chair), Ronald Bayer, Solomon R. Benatar, Marge Chigwanda, Dennis Dixon, Deborah Donnell, Laura Guay, Stella Kirkendale, Bernard Lo, Kathleen MacQueen, Sophia Mukaso Monico, Vasantha Muthuswamy, Katharine Shapiro, Ronald Strauss, Steve Wakefield, and Cynthia Woodsong

  3. HIV Prevention Trials Network • Worldwide collaborative clinical trials network • More than two dozen international sites • Leadership group (FHI, FHCRC, Hopkins/Univ of Pittsburgh) • Develops and tests the safety and efficacy of non-vaccine interventions designed to prevent the transmission of HIV • Established in 1999 by the DAIDS/NIAID/NIH

  4. JHCCP Photoshare Gary Lewis, JHU/CCP, South Africa 1999 HPTN Working Groups • Antiretroviral Therapy • Behavioral • Microbicides • Perinatal • STDs • Substance Use • Community • Ethics

  5. HPTN Structural Challenges • Wide range of research > Flexibility • Diverse local contexts > Responsive • Collaboration > Procedural, not prescriptive • Compatibility with existing HPTN & DAIDS procedures • Prevention & public health perspective

  6. HPTN Ethical Challenges • What are acceptable standards of care? • What are researchers’ responsibilities for moving research into policy & practice? • How should stigma be dealt with? • When are placebo controlled trials justified? • How can informed consent be assured? • Is research on new interventions ethical if existing knowledge is not being used?

  7. HPTN Ethics Guidance for Research • Participants and communities • Obligations • Process not prescription • Do what is doable, achieve the achievable • Creativity, persistence, partnership

  8. What is Community? A group of people with diverse characteristics who are linked by social ties, share common perspectives, and engage in joint action in geographical locations or settings. MacQueen KM, et al. What is community? An evidence-based definition for participatory public health. AJPH2001;91:1929–1938

  9. Community Representation • Representatives should be actively connected to diverse people in their local communities and empowered to function in ways that are meaningful to their community base. • A cookbook approach to participatory programs and research will not work because the experience of community differs from one setting to another. • Each research collaboration must reconcile the differences and similarities among the participating communities. MacQueen KM, et al. What is community? An evidence-based definition for participatory public health. AJPH2001;91:1929–1938

  10. Participants / Communities Poor community health care Enhanced care for participants Two-tiered health system Beneficence Disparity Stigma? Brain drain? Sustainability? Inducement The Lucky Few The Unlucky Many

  11. Participants + Communities Poor community health care Partner to improve care Enhanced care for participants Capacity building Equity Beneficence Improved community health care Stigma?

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