1 / 14

Alaa AbouZeid 1 , Mohammad Afzal 1 , Henry Silverman 2

Adequacy of Ethical Review and Informed Consent Documents in Investigations Submitted For Funding To The Eastern Mediterranean Region of the World Health Organization. Alaa AbouZeid 1 , Mohammad Afzal 1 , Henry Silverman 2

zander
Download Presentation

Alaa AbouZeid 1 , Mohammad Afzal 1 , Henry Silverman 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Adequacy of Ethical Review and Informed Consent Documents in Investigations Submitted For Funding To The Eastern Mediterranean Region of the World Health Organization Alaa AbouZeid1, Mohammad Afzal1, Henry Silverman2 1WHO, Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office, Research Policy and Cooperation Unit, Cairo. Egypt 2 University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA Funding: Supported in part by FIC/NIH5 R25 TW007090-02

  2. Background • Research in developing countries has grown enormously during the last decade. • Commentators have expressed concern that: • many of these countries lack effective ethics review systems • the concept of informed consent is imperfectly realized. • The current literature only describes in qualitative terms the status of ethics review of research and the regard for informed consent in the countries of the Eastern Mediterranean Region. • A thorough situation analysis of the status of health research ethics in the Eastern Mediterranean Region would help policy makers enhance efforts to increase research ethics capacity.

  3. Objectives • To determine the extent to which ethics review is obtained for health research. • To determine the extent to which there is an intent to obtain informed consent for health research. • To determine the adequacy of informed consent forms used in health research.

  4. Methods Setting: • Applicants from 12 countries submitted proposals (2006) to the • EMRO/WHO Grant schemes in priority areas of public health • EMRO-COMSTECH Grant schemes in applied biotechnology and genomics. Data Measurements: • Analysis of information stated in the proposals regarding the obtainment of ethics review and the intent to obtain informed consent. • Analysis of elements of informed consent forms in submitted forms

  5. Methods • We developed a checklist tool listing the basic elements of informed consent (IC). • A scale of 1-5 was used to rate each element. • A score of 1 indicated presence of the element with complete and understandable information • A score of 2-4 indicated presence of the element, but with inadequate information • A score of 5 indicated absence of the element. • Two authors (AB-Z and MA) made an independent assessment of the elements; the third author (HJS) compared the assessments and subsequently merged the two assessments to produce a final rating.

  6. RESULTS * Proposals contained multiple types of research methods + % of total submissions (n = 144)

  7. RESULTS

  8. Country Data

  9. Number of Missing Elements

  10. Discussion • Many investigators (~45%) did not obtain ethical approval for their research proposals prior to submission. • Many investigators (~30%) did not intend to obtain informed consent • Of those investigators who realized the value of informed consent, only two-thirds submitted a written document. • A large number of basic elements of informed consent forms were absent or inadequately describe in many informed consent forms.

  11. Half Full or Half Empty?

  12. What is the Benchmark? • Studies from Western countries have also demonstrated inadequacy of informed consent documents • Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments (1950s) • Office for Human Research Protections (OHRP) • NIH sponsored study regarding treatment of respiratory failure (1990s) Silverman, et.al Crit Care Med. 2001

  13. Recommendations • Awareness regarding the necessity of ethical review and need for informed consent needs to be enhanced among many investigators in the Eastern Mediterranean Region. • Increased efforts are needed to enhance the knowledge regarding information needed for a valid informed consent • Educational training programs should further be developed to enhance research ethics capacity.

More Related