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Ethics People should be treated as ends not means

Ethics People should be treated as ends not means. Ethical Responsibilities in Research Ethics in Steps. How are participants selected? Is there any bias in the way the participants were selected? Do the participants understand their participation is voluntary?

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Ethics People should be treated as ends not means

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  1. EthicsPeople should be treated as ends not means

  2. Ethical Responsibilities in ResearchEthics in Steps • How are participants selected? • Is there any bias in the way the participants were selected? • Do the participants understand their participation is voluntary? • Do the participants understand they can withdrawal their participation at any time?

  3. Ethical Responsibilities in ResearchEthics in Steps • What methods will be used on the participants? • Will participants be harmed by the methods? • Does the method involve deception? If so, can the deception be avoided or justly explained? • Will there be any short or long term side effects from the method used?

  4. Ethical Responsibilities in ResearchEthics in Steps • How are the data analyzed? • Is the privacy of the participant secured? • How are the results reported? • Is the privacy of the participant secured? • How will the participants be informed of the results, if necessary?

  5. Institutional Review Board • Scientific Validity • Determines if the experiment will yield useful data • Risk/Benefit Analysis • Adequate safety monitoring • Exclusion of populations at increased risk • Coding of Data • Adequately trained research personnel • Physical, Psychological, Social, Economic and Legal risks all evaluated • Severity, duration, and reversibility are also considered parts of the risk • Financial compensation is not considered a benefit • http://www.oprs.ucla.edu/human/documents/pdf/19.pdf

  6. Institutional Review Board • Subject Recruitment • Special groups, such as children • Ethical exclusion of age, race, gender, etc • Informed Consent • All participants, or legal guardians of participants, must sign consent describing purpose of experiment • Include risks and benefits involved • Consent forms must be free of coercion • Participants may remove their consent at any time • http://www.oprs.ucla.edu/human/documents/pdf/19.pdf

  7. Institutional Review Board • Privacy and Confidentiality • Alternatives to Participation • Drugs • Research Staff Qualifications • Deception and Debriefing • All subjects must be debriefed, especially if deception was used. Debriefing should offer explanations and help that can be sought out • http://www.oprs.ucla.edu/human/documents/pdf/19.pdf

  8. Deception in Research • Passive Deception • Withholding information about the study • Active Deception • Deliberately misleading the participants

  9. Deception in Research • Alternatives to Deception • Role playing • Simulation studies • When you can not avoid it • Make sure all risks are included in consent form • Potential results must be worth it • Must debrief participants as soon as possible

  10. Integrity • Avoiding Fraud • Replication • repeat a research study to validate results • Peer Review • critical analysis of research by peers in the same area • Plagiarism • taking credit for another’s work or ideas

  11. Examples • Stanford Prison • Little Albert • Milgram • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ngB8T5SKQTA

  12. Ethics with Animals • Benefits of using animals • Same general structure • More control over past and experiment • When experiment calls for irreversible or harmful effects

  13. Ethics with Animals • Animal rights then start to be factored in • Why do to them what we wouldn’t even do to ourselves? • All very controversial and one must decide for themselves

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