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An Overview of Research Ethics & The Tri-Council Policy Statement 2

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1 An Overview of Research Ethics & The Tri-Council Policy Statement 2
Grace Kelly Ethics Officer Health Sciences Delegated Board - Level 1 & 2 Non-Medical Full Board & Delegated Board

2 The Office of Research Ethics plays an administrative role to two main boards here at Western:
The Health Sciences Research Ethics Board (HSREB) The Non-Medical Research Ethics Board (NMREB) Here today to discuss specific board, and a little later on in the presentation we will discuss which ones of these boards you would submit to. As you are here for a specific presentation you will likely usually submit to that board, but there may be some crossover from time to time between the two boards.

3 Each of these two main boards are divided further, based on the level of risk indicated in the protocol. HSREB (3) Full Board, Delegated Level 1, Delegated Level 2 NMREB (2) Full Board, Delegated Faculty level sub-REBs

4 Non-Medical Research Ethics Board
Research that takes place outside of a medical or health care environment Research that does not relate to medical records or invasive procedures Faculties which must submit to the NMREB: Arts & Humanities Don Wright Faculty of Music Education Engineering Information and Media Studies Law Social Science Richard Ivey School of Business

5 Delegated Review Any research that is deemed minimal risk or lower and does not use vulnerable participants, children or in some cases elderly. Minimal Risk: Research in which the probability and magnitude of possible harms implied by participation in the research is no greater than those encountered by participants in those aspects of their everyday life that relate to the research.

6 Vulnerability Often caused by limited capacity, or limited access to social goods, such as rights, opportunities and power. Individuals or groups in vulnerable circumstances have historically included children, the elderly, women, prisoners, those with mental health issues and those with diminished capacity for self-determination. Ethnocultural minorities and those who are institutionalized are other examples of groups who have, at times, been treated unfairly and inequitably in research, or have been excluded from research opportunities. People or groups whose circumstances cause them to be vulnerable or marginalized may need to be afforded special attention in order to be treated justly in research.

7 Tri-Council Policy Statement 2 (TCPS2)
The TCPS2 is a policy that has been created as a benchmark for the ethical conduct of research involving humans. The TCPS2 has been set as a benchmark for the ethical conduct of research involving humans. Just recently (2010) the document went through an extensive revision which allowed for inclusion of more in-depth information surrounding some of the major issues and questions within research ethics. These are one of the guidelines we base our guidelines on in our office.

8 The Tri-Council Policy Statement 2 (TCPS2)
When do you need ethics approval? What is informed consent and when is it needed?

9 ALL research involving human participants is subject to ethics review by an REB, even if approval may not be needed. If you are doing research with humans please contact our office first.

10 (a) research involving living human participants;
The following require ethics review and approval by an REB before the research commences: (a) research involving living human participants; (b) research involving human biological materials, as well as human embryos, fetuses, fetal tissue, reproductive materials and stem cells. This applies to materials derived from living and deceased individuals. The level of review that a protocol submission gets is based on how high of risk that protocol has. Again we will discuss which boards your protocols will go to a little later, but the most important thing of all I believe is deciding whether or not you need ethics at all from the beginning.

11 The following MAY NOT require ethics review and approval by an REB before the research commences:
Research that relies exclusively on publicly available information does not require REB review when: (a) the information is legally accessible to the public and appropriately protected by law; or (b) the information is publicly accessible and there is no reasonable expectation of privacy.

12 REB review is not required for research involving the observation of people in public places where:
(a) it does not involve any intervention staged by the researcher, or direct interaction with the individuals or groups; (b) individuals or groups targeted for observation have no reasonable expectation of privacy; and (c) any dissemination of research results does not allow identification of specific individuals.

13 REB review is not required for research that relies exclusively on secondary use of anonymous information, or anonymous human biological materials, so long as the process of data linkage or recording or dissemination of results does not generate identifiable information.

14 Quality assurance and quality improvement studies, program evaluation activities, and performance reviews, or testing within normal educational requirements when used exclusively for assessment, management or improvement purposes, do not constitute research for the purposes of this Policy, and do not fall within the scope of REB review.

15 Creative practice activities, in and of themselves, do not require REB review.
However, research that employs creative practice to obtain responses from participants that will be analyzed to answer a research question is subject to REB review.

16 The Informed Consent Process
Consent shall be given voluntarily and informed. Consent can be withdrawn at any time. (c) If a participant withdraws consent, the participant can also request the withdrawal of their data or human biological materials.

17 Alternate forms of Informed Consent
Certain types of research require alternate processes for seeking consent. Where elements of the consent process may need to be adapted to the requirements of a particular research project, the research ethics board (REB) can play an educational and consultative role in determining the appropriate process for seeking and maintaining consent.

18 It should be noted that you ALWAYS still need to inform a participant of the research, the risks, benefits, etc. and they must consent to this. Verbal Scripts Explicit Consent by completion of a survey

19 The University of Western Ontario Research Ethics Board (REB) and Office of Research Ethics (ORE)
Deadlines Timelines Forms Romeo

20 Deadlines The ORE sets deadlines for each of its major boards
NMREB Full Board – Deadlines Delegated – No deadlines HSREB Full Board – Deadlines Delegated Level 1 – No deadlines Delegated Level 2 – Deadlines the same as HSREB Full Board

21 Timelines NMREB Full Board Review
Protocols are submitted on the deadline date Reviewed by meeting date posted on our website Recommendations sent out within 3 days of the meeting NMREB Delegated Review Protocols can be submitted at anytime Reviewed within 2 weeks of being submitted Recommendations sent out within 5 days of review

22 Forms The REB provides initial review and approval to a research project and the REB and the ORE provide ongoing post-approval review to research revision, etc. We are currently in the process of going electronic with our submissions - ROMEO

23 ROMEO New electronic database currently used in-house
ROMEO New electronic database currently used in-house. Within the next six months the ORE will be going live with the new online submission form. Training and education sessions institution wide.

24 We are always here to help.
Thank you! We are always here to help. If you have any questions please contact Grace Kelly at ext or or Julie Pfeiffer at ext or

25 Acknowledgements: Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, and Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Tri-Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans, December 2010.


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