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Ethics and Social Research

Ethics and Social Research. Chapter 3. Introduction. Ethical principles in research The set of values, standards, and principles used to determine appropriate and acceptable conduct at all stages of the research process. Introduction. Stop and Think

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Ethics and Social Research

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  1. Ethics and Social Research Chapter 3

  2. Introduction • Ethical principles in research • The set of values, standards, and principles used to determine appropriate and acceptable conduct at all stages of the research process

  3. Introduction • Stop and Think • Do you know of any research projects in the social sciences, medicine, or biology where researchers did something that was ethically questionable? • What was it about the study that raised questions for you?

  4. Introduction Historical perspectives on research ethics American Psychological Association (APA) American Sociological Association (ASA)

  5. Introduction Historical perspectives on research ethics Total disregard for the human dignity perpetrated during World War II by researchers in concentration camps controlled by Nazi Germany Air pressure Cold water Treatment of wounds Exposure to chemical-warfare agents Essential to have voluntary consent of human subjects

  6. Introduction • Historical perspectives on research ethics • Nuremberg Code • Principles about research on human beings

  7. Introduction • Historical perspectives on research ethics • Atomic Energy Commission • Conducted research on the effects of radiation on human subjects, including medical research on using radioisotopes to diagnose or cure disease • Semi-comatose cancer patients were injected with plutonium to determine how much uranium was needed to produce kidney damage

  8. Introduction Historical perspectives on research ethics The Tuskegee Syphilis Study Conducted by the United States Public Health Service to study the effect of untreated syphilis to determine the natural history of the disease Project began in 1932 and lasted 40 years Sample began with 399 poor black men with late-stage syphilis. In the end, the study included a total of 600 men. Offered free medical care in exchange for their medical data. None were told that they had syphilis. More than 400 were not offered the standard treatment for syphilis. They were also not provided penicillin when it became available as a cure. Many of the men died of the disease and some unknowingly transmitted the disease to their wives and children.

  9. Introduction Historical perspectives on research ethics Institutional review board (IRB) Thecommittee at acollege, university, or research center responsible for evaluating the ethics of proposed research Levels of IRB review

  10. Quiz – Question 1 • What is the primary factor to consider in determining the needed level of IRB review?

  11. Introduction • Focal research • “Ethical Concerns and Researcher Responsibilities in Studying Women with HIV/AIDS” • Process of conducting research • Ethical practices • Using informed consent procedures • Respondent’s privacy and confidentiality • Preserving the integrity of the respondent’s narratives

  12. Principles for Doing Ethical Research • Ethics • A set of moral and social standards that includes both prohibitions against and prescriptions for specific kinds of behavior in research

  13. Principles for Doing Ethical Research • Principles regarding participants in research • Protect study participants from harm • The principle that participants in studies are not harmed, physically, psychologically, emotionally, legally, socially, or financially as a result of their participation in a study • Milgram experiment

  14. Principles for Doing Ethical Research • Principles regarding participants in research • Voluntary participation and informed consent • The principle that study participants choose to participate of their own free will • Informed consent • A statement that describes the study and the researcher and formally requests participation

  15. Principles for Doing Ethical Research • Stop and Think • Who should give informed consent in a study involving students under 18? • The students? • Their parents? • Both?

  16. Principles for Doing Ethical Research • Principles regarding participants in research • Voluntary participation and informed consent • Passive consent • When no response is considered an affirmative consent to participate in research; also called “opt out informed consent

  17. Principles for Doing Ethical Research Principles regarding participants in research Voluntary participation and informed consent Are participants really volunteers? Have you ever been asked by an instructor while your were his or her student to participate in a study they were conducting? Were you ever asked while in a class to complete a questionnaire or participate in an interview? Did you feel an pressure or did you feel you could decline easily? Are students in these situations truly volunteers?

  18. Principles for Doing Ethical Research Principles regarding participants in research Voluntary participation and informed consent Is it ethical to observe people in public, without there knowledge? Study college students by letting them assume you are one of them Gather data by attending an AA meeting

  19. Principles for Doing Ethical Research • Principles regarding participants in research • Anonymity and confidentiality • Anonymity • When no one, including the researcher, knows the identities of research participants

  20. Principles for Doing Ethical Research • Principles regarding participants in research • Anonymity and confidentiality • Confidentiality (privacy) • When no third party knows the identities of the research participants • Keeping the information disclosed by study participants, including their identities, from all other parties

  21. Principles for Doing Ethical Research • Principles regarding participants in research • Anonymity and confidentiality • Tearoom Trade - Humphreys

  22. Quiz – Question 2 • What two principles did Humphrey’s violate?

  23. Principles for Doing Ethical Research • Ethical issues concerning colleagues and the general public • Honest reporting • The ethical responsibility to produce and report accurate data

  24. Principles for Doing Ethical Research • Ethical dilemmas during and after data collection • Who owns the data? • Whose interpretation counts? • Who has veto power? • What are the researcher’s obligations after the data are collected? • Can the data be used against the participants? • Will the data be used on their behalf? • Do researchers have an obligation to protect the communities and the social groups they study or just to guard the rights of individuals?

  25. Principles for Doing Ethical Research • Ethical dilemmas during and after data collection • Conflicts between ethical principles • Research by Ptacek (1988) • Research by Yassour-Borochowitz (2004)

  26. Conflicts Between Ethical Concerns and Legal Matters • Research by Calvey (2008) • Research by Leo (1995) • Research by Scarce (1995)

  27. Conflicts Between Ethical Principles and Research Interests • Research by Jackall (1998) • Research by Frankenberg (1993) • Research by Rollins (1985) • Research by Lauder (2003) • Research by Ward and Henderson (2003)

  28. Ethics and Publishing Results • Research by Ellis and colleagues (2008)

  29. Making Decisions to Maximize Benefit and Minimize Risk • Think about the consequences of doing a given study as opposed to not doing the study • Consider all options and methods to find a research strategy that balances being ethical, being practical, with the likelihood of obtaining good quality data

  30. Summary • Protect research participants from harm • Get informed consent • Be sure the study participants have not been pressured into volunteering • Collect data anonymously or keep data confidential • Submit the research proposal to a review board • Provide accurate research findings • Consider responsibilities to research colleagues and the general public • Maximize benefits and minimize risks

  31. Quiz – Question 3 Of the following ways to do research, which is likely to involve the most serious ethical concerns? • In person interviews • Mail in questionnaires • Observation in a public place • Analyzing data from a secondary source • Content analysis

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