Ethical challenges in mental health research among internally displaced people:ethical theory and research implementation

Dublin Core

Title

Ethical challenges in mental health research among internally displaced people:ethical theory and research implementation

Author

Siriwardhana, Chesmal
Adikari, Anushka
Jayaweera, Kaushalya
Sumathipala, Athula

Publisher

2013/0312

Language

English

Publication Date

20130312

Abstract

Millions of people undergo displacement in the world. Internally displaced people (IDP) are especially vulnerable as they are not protected by special legislation in contrast to other migrants. Research conducted among IDPs must be correspondingly sensitive in dealing with ethical issues that may arise. Muslim IDPs in Puttalam district in the North-Western province of Sri Lanka were initially displaced from Northern Sri Lanka due to the conflict in 1991. In the backdrop of a study exploring the prevalence of common mental disorders among the IDPs, researchers encountered various ethical challenges. These included inter-related issues of autonomy, non-maleficence, beneficence, confidentiality and informed consent, and how these were tailored in a culture-specific way to a population that has increased vulnerability. This paper analyses how these ethical issues were perceived, detected and managed by the researchers, and the role of ethics review committees in mental health research concerning IDPs. The relevance of guidelines and methodologies in the context of an atypical study population and the benefit versus risk potential of research for IDPs are also discussed. The limitations that were encountered while dealing with ethical challenges during the study are discussed. The concept of post-research ethical conduct audit is suggested to be considered as a potential step to minimize the exploitation of vulnerable populations such as IDPs in mental health research

Primary Classification

18.5.1

Secondary Classification

18.5.1;21.1

Primary keywords

autonomy--[pri];community participation--[pri];informed consent--[pri];mental health--[pri];Muslims--[pri];refugees--[pri];research--[pri];vulnerable populations--[pri]

Secondary keywords

beneficence;bioethical issues;confidentiality;developing countries;ethical analysis;mental disorders;research ethics;researchers;war

Subject

Sri Lanka--[pri]

Subject

Islam

Journal Article

BMC Medical Ethics2013 March 12; 14:13:8 p.

Note

Creative Commons License Attribution License 2.0

Call Number

citation

Bibliography

24 refs.

ISSN

14726939 (online)

Collection

Citation

“Ethical challenges in mental health research among internally displaced people:ethical theory and research implementation,” Islamic Medical & Scientific Ethics, accessed January 15, 2025, https://imse.ibp.georgetown.domains/items/show/37131.