Ethical practices for health research in the Eastern Mediterranean region of the World Health Organization:a retrospective data analysis.

Dublin Core

Title

Ethical practices for health research in the Eastern Mediterranean region of the World Health Organization:a retrospective data analysis.

Author

Abdur Rab, Mohammad
Afzal, Mohammad
Abou-Zeid, Alaa
Silverman, Henry

Publisher

2008/05/00

Language

English

Publication Date

20080500

Abstract

Background: Commentators have expressed concern regarding the existence of proper ethics review systems in developing countries. Our aim is to explore the extent with which investigators from countries in the Eastern Mediterranean (EM) Region consider several ethical practices in the conduct of their research. Methodology/Principal Findings: Investigators from 12 countries in the EM region submitted 143 proposals involving Public Health and Biotechnology & Genomics to a grant scheme funded by the Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office of the WHO and the Organization of Islamic Conference Standing Committee for Science and Technological Cooperation in 2006. The grant application included a 1-page questionnaire that asked investigators 1) whether ethical clearance was obtained, 2) whether they plan to obtain informed consent, and 3) whether confidentiality of human subject data would be ensured. The methodologies of the submitted researches were categorized as to whether it involved 1) human subject research (e.g., the prospective collection of biological specimens or the performance of qualitative research), 2) research that could be exempt from ongoing ethics review, and 3) research not involving human subjects. A descriptive analysis was used to analyze the investigators' responses and a chi-square analysis was used to analyze categorical variables. Of the 79 submitted proposals determined to involve 'human subjects', ethical clearance was not obtained in 29%

Abstract Translated

investigators thought that informed consent was not needed in 29%; and investigators did not mention that they would ensure confidentiality of the obtained data in 8% of the studies. The magnitude of these deficiencies was similar regardless of study design type, i.e., prospective collection of biological samples and qualitative research methods. Conclusion/Significance: These results suggest that attention to ethical safeguards is not optimal among investigators in the EM Region. Further guidelines for strengthening ethical review systems, as well as enhanced educational training in concepts of research ethics for investigators are warranted in this region.

Primary Classification

18.2

Secondary Classification

18.2;18.5.9;1.3.9;18.4

Primary keywords

behavioral research--[pri];biomedical research--[pri];developing countries--[pri];ethical review--[pri];human experimentation--[pri];qualitative research--[pri];research ethics--[pri]

Secondary keywords

biological specimen banks;focus groups;guideline adherence;health services research;informed consent;interviews;research ethics committees;questionnaires;regulation;survey

Subject

Mediterranean Region--[pri];Middle East--[pri]

Subject

Arab world

Journal Article

PLoS One 2008 May; 3(5): e2094 [Online]. Accessed:2009 October 22

Note

35

Primary Document Type

ja

Call Number

citation

Subject Captions

em

Bibliography

15 refs.

ISBN

1932-6203

Collection

Citation

“Ethical practices for health research in the Eastern Mediterranean region of the World Health Organization:a retrospective data analysis.,” Islamic Medical & Scientific Ethics, accessed January 24, 2025, https://imse.ibp.georgetown.domains/items/show/34414.