AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore the experiences of researchers submitting ethical proposals for studies involving older adults, including those with dementia, focusing on their interactions with ethical review boards.
  • The survey involved 157 researchers, revealing six main concerns when seeking approval: informed consent requirements, participant vulnerability, participant burden, data access, potential adverse effects, and study methodology.
  • Respondents expressed both positive and negative experiences with ethics committees, highlighting issues like legal risk focus and neglecting the perspectives of older participants, while suggesting improvements such as bias reflection and better communication with gerontological researchers.

Article Abstract

The goal of this study was to describe researchers' experiences in submitting ethical proposals focused on older adult populations, including studies with persons with dementia, to ethical review boards. Ethical approval was granted for an online survey. Researchers were recruited via listservs and snowballing techniques. Participants included 157 persons (73% female) from Australia and the United States, with a mean age of 46 (±13). Six main issues were encountered by researchers who participated in this survey. In descending order, these included questions regarding: informed consent and information requirements (61.1%), participants' vulnerability, particularly for those with cognitive impairments (58.6%), participant burden (44.6%), data access (29.3%), adverse effects of data collection/intervention (26.8%), and study methodology (25.5%). An inductive content analysis of responses revealed a range of encounters with ethical review panels spanning positive, negative, and neutral experiences. Concerns voiced about ethical review boards included committees being overly focused on legal risk, as well as not always hearing the voice of older research participants, both potential and actual. Respondents noted inability to move forward on studies, as well as loss of researchers and participant groups from gerontological and clinical research as a result of negative interactions with ethics committees. Positive interactions with the committees reinforced researchers' need to carefully construct their research approaches with persons with dementia in particular. Suggested guidelines for committees when dealing with ethics applications involving older adults include self-reflecting on potential biases and stereotypes, and seeking further clarification and information from gerontological researchers before arriving at decisions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JAD-141956DOI Listing

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