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History of Research Protections for American Indian and Alaska Native Individuals and Communities

History of Research Protections for American Indian and Alaska Native Individuals and Communities. Northern Plains Tribal Epidemiology Center Aberdeen Area Tribal Chairmen’s Health Board June 16, 2005. William L. Freeman, MD, MPH, CIP. Director of Tribal Community Health Programs,

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History of Research Protections for American Indian and Alaska Native Individuals and Communities

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  1. History of Research Protections for American Indian and Alaska Native Individuals and Communities Northern Plains Tribal Epidemiology Center Aberdeen Area Tribal Chairmen’s Health Board June 16, 2005

  2. William L. Freeman, MD, MPH, CIP Director of Tribal Community Health Programs, & Human Protections Administrator Northwest Indian College 360-392-4284 fax 360-647-7084 wfreeman@nwic.edu with material by: • Warren Ashe (Howard University) • Jeffrey Cohen (formerly, Office for Human Research Protection--OHRP) • Dale Hammerschmidt (University of Minnesota)

  3. Hy’shqe siam -Thank you, respected teachers • Community members, & community IRB members • Sam Deloria, Lisa Preston, and others • IRB members • Dr. Francine Romero, and others • IRB staff • Helen McGough, Moira Keane, Susan Kornetsky, and others • Researchers • Participants • Carolyn Robbins - Wife

  4. Objectives • To know the basic chronology of the development of the ethics and regulations of protection for individuals in research • To understand the basic intent, nature, and limitations of those regulations • To discuss 2 controversies concerning the regulations • To understand protection of communities in research, and how it can be accomplished

  5. Early problematic research • Infected prostitutes and children with syphilis to test immunity by serum from syphilitic patients, without consent (Germany, 1892) • BCG (TB vaccine) disaster--77 of 256 children died (Germany, late 1920s) • Poor children, especially orphans (1800s-early 1900s, USA & others) • Hebrew Infant Asylum, no orange juice to orphans to study development of scurvy (NYC) • Medical profession changed, to prevent anti-research groundswell • Susan Lederer Subjected to Science: Human Experimentation in America Before the Second World War 1997.

  6. Research atrocities by Nazis, WWII • In concentration camps (Dachau) and killing camps (Auschwitz) • Immerse prisoners in cold water • until they died – the intent of the research • Decompress prisoners in high-altitude chambers • until they died – the intent of the research • Inject many prisoners with typhus • many died • Nuremberg Medical Trial, 1946-47 • tried 23 defendants (20 physicians) • convicted 15

  7. The Nuremberg Code, Aug. 19, 1947 • 10 rules for “Permissible Medical Experiments”: • voluntary consent, without coercion, • good science, done by good scientists, • potential benefits justify experiment, • harms minimized, • degree of risk less than potential benefit, • subjects can end their participation, … [and 4 more] • A start, but with limited applicability: • medical research only, & only on normal subjects • asked "When is research criminal?" • http://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/references/nurcode.htm

  8. After WWII • Radiation experiments (1950s+) • consent absent, or inadequate & deceptive • Willowbrook (1950s) • deliberately infected mentally retarded children with hepatitis virus • coercion of parents • Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital (1960s) • injected live cancer cells into 22 elderly patients, some with dementia, some spoke only Yiddish • consent deceptive, inadequate, & not translated • guardians not asked for permission • Lerner BH. Sins of omission – cancer research without informed consent. NEJM 2004; 351(7):628-630.

  9. Henry Beecher • 1966 article summarized 22 recent unethical medical experiments (out of 50 examples accumulated) • in major medical centers, by prominent researchers, funded by respected sources, published in prestigious journals (including NEJM): • perform heart catheterizations on patients getting a bronchoscopy [look at breathing passages through a tube] • placebo control groups in life-threatening diseases with known effective treatments -- several • randomize soldiers with strep throat to penicillin vs. treatments known-to-be-ineffective [ineffective treatment may lead to rheumatic heart disease] • I.E., ethical problems were mainstream, not fringe • "Ethics and clinical research" NEJM 1966 vol 274, p. 1354-60

  10. US Public Health Service Syphilis Study • Natural history of untreated syphilis in 405 African American men impoverished sharecroppers around Tuskegee, AL 1932-72 • Researchers lied to the men • said they treated them for "bad blood" • Highly "successful" • dropout rate only 1% over 40 years • Why was it so “successful”? • The reason: it was "culturally sensitive" • paid for funeral, African American nurse & some doctors • Not secret! • Updated results published about every 5 years

  11. National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research • By the 1974 National Research Act • First, it proposed regulations: • required Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) • for research done or conducted by HEW (now DHHS) • 45 CFR 46 (Title 45 Code of Federal Regulations Chapter 46) http://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/humansubjects/guidance/45cfr46.htm

  12. Then issued The Belmont Report • Basic ethical principles underlying its proposed regulations ( - and their application): • Respect for persons • Informed Consent • Beneficence • Assessment of potential risks [harms] and benefits • Justice • Selection of people to be in the research http://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/humansubjects/guidance/belmont.htm

  13. Principle: Beneficence • "Do no harm" - "Do benefit" • Assessment of risks [harms] and benefits • Minimize harms to participants • Use least harmful methods to achieve the scientific end • Favorable Benefit-to-Risk comparison • maximize Benefit:-to-Risk ratio • maximize benefits to participants and society

  14. Principle: Justice • "Treat individuals fairly" • Selection of subjects / participants • Equitable distribution of research harms and benefits • Equitable selection of subjects / participants within a population • Equitable selection of population

  15. Principle: Respect for Persons • "Individual autonomy" • Informed consent • full information • full comprehension • voluntary • without coercion • protect individuals with reduced capacity to exercise autonomy

  16. CONTROVERSY #1: "The regulations are designed only forexperimental medical research." • A common complaint of some behavioral or non-experimental researchers. • Many ethically problematic studies were medical research. • Let’s examine the sentence: • experimental research; • medical research.

  17. "The regulations are for 'experimental research' only." • Tuskegee was not an experiment. • It was observational research.

  18. Definition of research • "a systematic investigation, including research development, testing and evaluation, designed to develop or contribute to generalizable knowledge.... (S)ome demonstration and service programs may include research activities." • 45 CFR 46.102 (d) • The definition is not limited to “experimental” • Nevertheless, were the ethically problematic studies primarily “medical” research?

  19. Behavioral research with problematic ethics - 1 • Milgram (1963) • Behavioral study of obedience • a few participants still quite distressed when queried well after the experiment • not medical • Humphries (1970) • Tearoom Trade: Impersonal Sex in Public Places • concerns of confidentiality and privacy • neither medical nor experimental

  20. Behavioral research with problematic ethics - 2 • The “Monster Study” so named by people who stutter & researchers of stuttering • by Mary Tudor & Wendell Johnson (1939, unpublished) Randomized trial: 12 normal-speaking orphans in IA orphanage • Researcher purposefully criticized the speech of 6 orphans--to induce stuttering • Some may have developed stuttering, a few for life. • Another example of orphan kids used in research • Franklin Silverman "The monster study" Journal of Fluency Disorders 1988 vol. 13, p. 225-231

  21. Behavioral research with problematic ethics - 3 Social science in the service of eugenics In the state of Vermont [VT], the first third of 20th century Surveys of "dumb" or "delinquent" children and their families “Dumb” or “delinquent” families were usually poor Catholic French Canadians, Abenaki Indians, or migrants Led to VT sterilizing some of the identified “dumb” or “delinquent” children -- "to protect the gene pool" Poor science: did not measure "dumbness" or "delinquency" Nancy L. Gallagher Breeding Better Vermonters: The Eugenics Project in the Green Mountain State 1999. [Please do not turn the page of the handout until asked to do so]

  22. Non-experimental behavioral research - 4 • What do you think has been the general kind of research that has caused the most harm to the most people in 20th century America? • USPHS syphilis study in Tuskegee? • radiation experiments? • eugenics? • other?

  23. My vote • IQ research comparing blacks and others • observational behavioral research (not medical) • contributed to and reinforced racial stigmatization of African Americans and others, including American Indian, Alaska Native, Canadian First Nation, and Inuit students and people • harmed primarily those communities, and all people in those communities • What will historians 40 years from now say about our research today? [Please turn page of handout]

  24. CONCLUSION #1 All types of research, both experimental and non-experimental, both medical and behavioral, has caused (and can cause) major harms • “Harms to communities”: when community members not in the original research are directly harmed by the results of the research • Several historical examples are harms that had not been recognized or emphasized previously • Researchers should have, or should obtain, the expertise to identify and minimize all potential harms, including harms to communities, in the research they do

  25. CONTROVERSY #2: What were the good, the bad, & the ugly in AI/AN research – and how to avoid the bad & ugly? • Research with AI/AN people/communities/tribes is not listed in the catalog of problematic research • A common feeling among many tribal people: research has harmed AI/AN people • What is behind that feeling?

  26. Older & current good history / research Tuberculosis was a killer, major cause of AI/AN death • last half 19th, & first half of 20th, centuries • Clinical trial of INH [isoniazid] in the Navajo Rez in early 1950s proved INH was an effective treatment, saved many AI/AN lives Diabetes is a killer - Diabetes Prevention Program [“DPP”] proved that intense counseling for lifestyle change could prevent type 2 diabetes [reduce calories, especially fats; moderate exercise 30 minutes a day 5 times a week; reduce weight by 7%] Community-Based Participatory Research - Kahnawa:ke Schools Diabetes Prevention Project - People Awakening Project with Alaska Native groups, about resiliency and strengths in dealing with alcoholism

  27. Older bad history • Research with radioactive iodine (I131) early 1950s, USAF "Do ANs survive the cold by having higher metabolism?" • Gave I131 to Alaska Native people • same amount as then used for thyroid scan • almost all ANs did not speak English • 3 AN women in research were breast feeding children! • Long term effects of thyroid scan not then known • (ANs: not higher metabolism; know how to dress and eat) • Involved radiation – a feared modern hazard

  28. Implications of older bad history • I131 and a few other older problematic studies had complex issues • children who were breast feeding may not have been followed up • The problem was basic protocol design

  29. Recent bad history - 1 • Barrow, Alaska study on alcoholism • 1970s, researchers from northeastern US • announced findings in press conference • held at their northeastern university • Internal stigmatization by people from Barrow & nearby communities • Bonds on Wall Street adversely affected • Impact of research results? • no positive change in/by Barrow

  30. Recent bad history - 2 • Congenital syphilis epidemic, 1980s • Rez not named in publication • gave precise 1980 US Census pop. • Rez children taunted ["Your mama's ..."] • Gas stations refused to let Rez people use restrooms

  31. Recent good & bad history - 3 • Hantavirus, summer 1993 • 50% of infected people died • first recognized on the Navajo Rez • CDC found cause <10 days--a virus from deer mice Good: helped NNDOH develop prevention programs • NNDOH asked CDC not to give Navajo place names in scientific articles Bad: 1st 2 articles, CDC named the Navajo Chapters • where the people lived who were infected first • where the deer mice and other animals were trapped • Navajo approved no research for >13 months

  32. Implications of recent bad history • Major community harm was disruption • Major individual harm was “internal” self-stigmatization • All subsequent research in many of those communities was adversely affected • The problem was publication-dissemination

  33. Current bad research – 1 • Nuu-chah-nulth First Nations [western Vancouver Island, BC, Canada], severe unusual arthritis • early 1980’s, UBC rheumatology & genetic researchers studied their problem, took blood specimens • geneticist kept specimens with him [UBC -> U Utah -> Oxford U], report migration genetic research results • Community found out 3 years ago • major adverse publicity across Canada • Community wanted the specimens back to finish the arthritis research • geneticist died early 2004, specimens were returned

  34. Current bad research – 2 • Havasupai • early 1990, tribe approved a diabetes study including genetic analysis, by ASU researchers • no NLM-listed journal articles on genetic analysis of T2DM among Havasupai, one article on nutrition • HLA, inbreeding, & migration genetic research also done using the specimens • sources: • Rubin P. Indian givers. Phoenix New Times 2004; May 27 • Dalton R. When two tribes go to war. Nature 2004; 430:500-2 • Editorial. Tribal culture versus genetics. Nature 2004; 430:489 • Pubmed: Havasupai OR Markow T[Author] OR Martin JF[Author] OR Benyshek D[Author] OR Zuerlein K[Author] • Paul Rubin [personal communication]

  35. Implications of current bad history • The old NIH policy and researcher practice, of sharing genetic specimens [usually anonymized for identity of the individual] is no longer appropriate • “Tribal approval of research” extends to future uses • of genetic & biological specimens • of data • Tribes vary about their degree of favorable or unfavorable attitude toward research in general • extent to which they see research as an enemy of, or a friend of, the tribe’s future physical and cultural survival • The values and relationships of the tribes and researchers are changing

  36. Current ugly research • Havasupai [there is more] • concurrently with T2DM study was schizophrenia study • apparently researchers told neither tribe nor individuals • apparently research team obtained information from clinic charts surreptitiously, after hours, with no approval • apparently the ASU IRB did not comply with own procedures & requirements • Was this “amateur night”? • Now prime example of ugly research in Indian Country • major adverse publicity in Arizona, major law suit by Havasupai More self-discipline by researcher and institution could have prevented this! Better IRB or tribal review could have prevented this!

  37. Current good research and practices • “Kennewick Man” is an example of bad practice • skeleton found 08/96, 1st scientist said was “caucasoid” • Kwaday Dan Ts’inchi - “Long Ago Man Found” • Champagne-Aishihik First Nations [FN], d. 1415-1445 • glacier in Tatshenshini-Alsek Park, British Columbia [BC] • body found 08/99, plan developed, studied to 12/2000 • returned to the Champagne-Aishihik • cremated, potlatch, ashes scattered where found 07/2001 • head found 08/2003, studied, laid to rest 10/2004 • final ceremonies being planned • FN community + BC government set up a joint group to oversee the research within cultural limits • “People Awakening” Project

  38. Values present in the regulations • Respect for persons • Minimize harms and maximize benefits to persons • Justice for persons But the regulations [= 45 CFR 46] do not cover: • Publication of private communal knowledge • Community’s definition of sensitive information [e,g, CDC’s hantavirus articles] • Desecration of bones in archaeologic remains • Misuse of specimens anonymized for individuals but from a community [community’s definition of misuse]

  39. Native values not explicit in the regulations • Protection of communities except obliquely • Respect for elders & knowledge of community ethnographic interviews published or archived by outsiders • Respect Native communities, strengths, and survival much research focuses on how bad things are not on how/why people survived and do well • Promote resiliency, help activate the community • Respect and promote tribal sovereignty

  40. ‘Protect communities,’ ‘respect elders,’ and ‘respect communities’ • Typical research on alcoholism or domestic violence: document how bad things are • attacks the value of community • Rather, research how/why people stopped domestic violence, or became and stayed sober – and thus promote resiliency, help activate the community • “People Awakening Project”

  41. CONCLUSION #2-A • Some research has been good for AI/AN individuals and tribes • Some research has been bad for AI/AN individuals and tribes • Some research has been both good and bad • Some research has been ugly • The regulations include some important AI/AN concerns • The regulations do not include other important AI/AN concerns

  42. CONCLUSION #2-B • Researchers are more ethical & knowledgeable • with, unfortunately, still some exceptions • IRBs do protect individuals • The regulations are valuable • IRBs & the regulations are a floor, not a ceiling • IRBs are necessary and quite valuable, • but they are not sufficient for tribal people, tribes, and TCUs. • Researchers, tribes, and TCUs need to work together to protect each other and themselves.

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