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Principal Investigator Views of the IRB System

We undertook a qualitative e-mail survey of federally-funded principal investigators of their views of the US human subjects protection system, intended to identify the range of investigator attitudes. This was an exploratory study with a 14% response rate. Twenty-eight principal investigators respo...

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Autores principales: Whitney, Simon N., Alcser, Kirsten, Schneider, Carl E., McCullough, Laurence B., McGuire, Amy L., Volk, Robert J.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2288790/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18392146
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author Whitney, Simon N.
Alcser, Kirsten
Schneider, Carl E.
McCullough, Laurence B.
McGuire, Amy L.
Volk, Robert J.
author_facet Whitney, Simon N.
Alcser, Kirsten
Schneider, Carl E.
McCullough, Laurence B.
McGuire, Amy L.
Volk, Robert J.
author_sort Whitney, Simon N.
collection PubMed
description We undertook a qualitative e-mail survey of federally-funded principal investigators of their views of the US human subjects protection system, intended to identify the range of investigator attitudes. This was an exploratory study with a 14% response rate. Twenty-eight principal investigators responded; their comments were analyzed to show underlying themes, which are here presented along with supporting quotations. There was consensus that it is important to protect human subjects from research abuse, but disagreement over how well the IRB system is functioning. Some researchers felt that the system is effective and serves its purpose well. Of those who support the system, some endorse its methods, purpose, and daily functioning, as they experience it, without reservation. Others, while expressing some frustration, feel that the purpose is important and their local IRB does its best to make a difficult system work well. Those investigators who were more harshly critical commented on multiple flaws in the system, including (1) consent forms that are inappropriate and incomprehensible, (2) an emphasis on minutiae, and (3) concern with protecting the institution more than research subjects. Respondents told us that the IRB system is a particular burden for research in neurology, emergency medical conditions, repositories, and social sciences in general; a more comprehensive study might identify other problematic areas. Significant concern was expressed about the cost, inefficiency, and irrationality of IRB review. The IRB system works well for some researchers, but our results indicate that other investigators feel the costs outweigh the benefits.
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spelling pubmed-22887902008-04-07 Principal Investigator Views of the IRB System Whitney, Simon N. Alcser, Kirsten Schneider, Carl E. McCullough, Laurence B. McGuire, Amy L. Volk, Robert J. Int J Med Sci Short Research Communication We undertook a qualitative e-mail survey of federally-funded principal investigators of their views of the US human subjects protection system, intended to identify the range of investigator attitudes. This was an exploratory study with a 14% response rate. Twenty-eight principal investigators responded; their comments were analyzed to show underlying themes, which are here presented along with supporting quotations. There was consensus that it is important to protect human subjects from research abuse, but disagreement over how well the IRB system is functioning. Some researchers felt that the system is effective and serves its purpose well. Of those who support the system, some endorse its methods, purpose, and daily functioning, as they experience it, without reservation. Others, while expressing some frustration, feel that the purpose is important and their local IRB does its best to make a difficult system work well. Those investigators who were more harshly critical commented on multiple flaws in the system, including (1) consent forms that are inappropriate and incomprehensible, (2) an emphasis on minutiae, and (3) concern with protecting the institution more than research subjects. Respondents told us that the IRB system is a particular burden for research in neurology, emergency medical conditions, repositories, and social sciences in general; a more comprehensive study might identify other problematic areas. Significant concern was expressed about the cost, inefficiency, and irrationality of IRB review. The IRB system works well for some researchers, but our results indicate that other investigators feel the costs outweigh the benefits. Ivyspring International Publisher 2008-04-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2288790/ /pubmed/18392146 Text en © Ivyspring International Publisher. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/). Reproduction is permitted for personal, noncommercial use, provided that the article is in whole, unmodified, and properly cited.
spellingShingle Short Research Communication
Whitney, Simon N.
Alcser, Kirsten
Schneider, Carl E.
McCullough, Laurence B.
McGuire, Amy L.
Volk, Robert J.
Principal Investigator Views of the IRB System
title Principal Investigator Views of the IRB System
title_full Principal Investigator Views of the IRB System
title_fullStr Principal Investigator Views of the IRB System
title_full_unstemmed Principal Investigator Views of the IRB System
title_short Principal Investigator Views of the IRB System
title_sort principal investigator views of the irb system
topic Short Research Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2288790/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18392146
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