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Research participants’ perception of ethical issues in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa
BACKGROUND: There is a growing interest in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa. These raise several ethical issues, such as consent, re-use, data sharing, storage, and incidental result of biological samples. Despite the availability of ethical guidelines developed for research in...
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
2023
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10593020/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37873327 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.10.03.23296473 |
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author | Jegede, Ayodele Balogun, Olubukola Olorunsogbon, Olorunyomi Felix Nichols, Michelle Akinyemi, Joshua Jenkins, Carolyn Ogunronbi, Mayowa Singh, Arti Obiako, Reginald Wahab, Kolawole Bello, Abiodun Akpalu, Albert Sarfo, Fred S. Owolabi, Lukman F. Ojebuyi, Babatunde Adigun, Muyiwa Olujobi, Dorcas Musbahu, Rabiu Titiloye, Musibau Afolami, Ibukun Calys-Tagoe, Benedict Uvere, Ezinne Laryea, Ruth Fakunle, Adekunle Adeleye, Osi Adesina, Deborah Mensah, Nathaniel Oguike, Wisdom Coleman, Nathaniel Adeniyi, Sunday Omotoso, Lanre Asibey, Shadrack Melikam, Lois Yusuf, Jibril Gbenga, Abdullateef Mande, Aliyu Uthman, Muhammed Kalaria, Rajesh N. Owolabi, Mayowa Ovbiagele, Bruce Arulogun, Oyedunni Akinyemi, Rufus O. |
author_facet | Jegede, Ayodele Balogun, Olubukola Olorunsogbon, Olorunyomi Felix Nichols, Michelle Akinyemi, Joshua Jenkins, Carolyn Ogunronbi, Mayowa Singh, Arti Obiako, Reginald Wahab, Kolawole Bello, Abiodun Akpalu, Albert Sarfo, Fred S. Owolabi, Lukman F. Ojebuyi, Babatunde Adigun, Muyiwa Olujobi, Dorcas Musbahu, Rabiu Titiloye, Musibau Afolami, Ibukun Calys-Tagoe, Benedict Uvere, Ezinne Laryea, Ruth Fakunle, Adekunle Adeleye, Osi Adesina, Deborah Mensah, Nathaniel Oguike, Wisdom Coleman, Nathaniel Adeniyi, Sunday Omotoso, Lanre Asibey, Shadrack Melikam, Lois Yusuf, Jibril Gbenga, Abdullateef Mande, Aliyu Uthman, Muhammed Kalaria, Rajesh N. Owolabi, Mayowa Ovbiagele, Bruce Arulogun, Oyedunni Akinyemi, Rufus O. |
author_sort | Jegede, Ayodele |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: There is a growing interest in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa. These raise several ethical issues, such as consent, re-use, data sharing, storage, and incidental result of biological samples. Despite the availability of ethical guidelines developed for research in Africa, there is paucity of information on how the research participants’ perspectives could guide the research community on ethical issues in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research. To explore African research participants’ perspectives on these issues, a study was conducted at existing Stroke Investigation Research and Education Network (SIREN) sites in Nigeria and Ghana. METHOD: Using an exploratory design, twenty-eight Focus Group Discussions (FGDs) sessions were conducted with stroke survivors (n=7), caregivers(n=7), stroke - free controls(n=7), and Community Advisory Board members(n=7). Data were collected using an interview guide. Interviews were conducted in English and indigenous languages of the community, audio recorded, and transcribed verbatim. Data were analyzed using NVivo (March, 2020) Software. RESULT: Results revealed that stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa require researchers’ direct attention to ethical issues. Concerns were raised about understanding, disclosure and absence of coercion as components of true autonomous decision making in research participation. Participants argued that the risk and benefits attached to participation should be disclosed at the time of recruitment. Fears around data sharing were voiced as adherence to the principle of privacy and confidentiality were of paramount importance to participants. The preference was to receive the results of incidental findings with no stigma attached from society. CONCLUSION: Research participants’ perspectives are a vital aspect of community engagement in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research. Findings from this study suggest that research participants are interested in these fields of research in Africa if their concerns about ethical issues are appropriately addressed within the research framework. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-10593020 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2023 |
publisher | Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-105930202023-10-24 Research participants’ perception of ethical issues in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa Jegede, Ayodele Balogun, Olubukola Olorunsogbon, Olorunyomi Felix Nichols, Michelle Akinyemi, Joshua Jenkins, Carolyn Ogunronbi, Mayowa Singh, Arti Obiako, Reginald Wahab, Kolawole Bello, Abiodun Akpalu, Albert Sarfo, Fred S. Owolabi, Lukman F. Ojebuyi, Babatunde Adigun, Muyiwa Olujobi, Dorcas Musbahu, Rabiu Titiloye, Musibau Afolami, Ibukun Calys-Tagoe, Benedict Uvere, Ezinne Laryea, Ruth Fakunle, Adekunle Adeleye, Osi Adesina, Deborah Mensah, Nathaniel Oguike, Wisdom Coleman, Nathaniel Adeniyi, Sunday Omotoso, Lanre Asibey, Shadrack Melikam, Lois Yusuf, Jibril Gbenga, Abdullateef Mande, Aliyu Uthman, Muhammed Kalaria, Rajesh N. Owolabi, Mayowa Ovbiagele, Bruce Arulogun, Oyedunni Akinyemi, Rufus O. medRxiv Article BACKGROUND: There is a growing interest in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa. These raise several ethical issues, such as consent, re-use, data sharing, storage, and incidental result of biological samples. Despite the availability of ethical guidelines developed for research in Africa, there is paucity of information on how the research participants’ perspectives could guide the research community on ethical issues in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research. To explore African research participants’ perspectives on these issues, a study was conducted at existing Stroke Investigation Research and Education Network (SIREN) sites in Nigeria and Ghana. METHOD: Using an exploratory design, twenty-eight Focus Group Discussions (FGDs) sessions were conducted with stroke survivors (n=7), caregivers(n=7), stroke - free controls(n=7), and Community Advisory Board members(n=7). Data were collected using an interview guide. Interviews were conducted in English and indigenous languages of the community, audio recorded, and transcribed verbatim. Data were analyzed using NVivo (March, 2020) Software. RESULT: Results revealed that stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa require researchers’ direct attention to ethical issues. Concerns were raised about understanding, disclosure and absence of coercion as components of true autonomous decision making in research participation. Participants argued that the risk and benefits attached to participation should be disclosed at the time of recruitment. Fears around data sharing were voiced as adherence to the principle of privacy and confidentiality were of paramount importance to participants. The preference was to receive the results of incidental findings with no stigma attached from society. CONCLUSION: Research participants’ perspectives are a vital aspect of community engagement in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research. Findings from this study suggest that research participants are interested in these fields of research in Africa if their concerns about ethical issues are appropriately addressed within the research framework. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC10593020/ /pubmed/37873327 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.10.03.23296473 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This article is a US Government work. It is not subject to copyright under 17 USC 105 and is also made available for use under a CC0 license (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) . |
spellingShingle | Article Jegede, Ayodele Balogun, Olubukola Olorunsogbon, Olorunyomi Felix Nichols, Michelle Akinyemi, Joshua Jenkins, Carolyn Ogunronbi, Mayowa Singh, Arti Obiako, Reginald Wahab, Kolawole Bello, Abiodun Akpalu, Albert Sarfo, Fred S. Owolabi, Lukman F. Ojebuyi, Babatunde Adigun, Muyiwa Olujobi, Dorcas Musbahu, Rabiu Titiloye, Musibau Afolami, Ibukun Calys-Tagoe, Benedict Uvere, Ezinne Laryea, Ruth Fakunle, Adekunle Adeleye, Osi Adesina, Deborah Mensah, Nathaniel Oguike, Wisdom Coleman, Nathaniel Adeniyi, Sunday Omotoso, Lanre Asibey, Shadrack Melikam, Lois Yusuf, Jibril Gbenga, Abdullateef Mande, Aliyu Uthman, Muhammed Kalaria, Rajesh N. Owolabi, Mayowa Ovbiagele, Bruce Arulogun, Oyedunni Akinyemi, Rufus O. Research participants’ perception of ethical issues in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa |
title | Research participants’ perception of ethical issues in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa |
title_full | Research participants’ perception of ethical issues in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa |
title_fullStr | Research participants’ perception of ethical issues in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa |
title_full_unstemmed | Research participants’ perception of ethical issues in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa |
title_short | Research participants’ perception of ethical issues in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in Africa |
title_sort | research participants’ perception of ethical issues in stroke genomics and neurobiobanking research in africa |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10593020/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37873327 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.10.03.23296473 |
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