Authors
Edward S Dove, David Townend, Eric M Meslin, Martin Bobrow, Katherine Littler, Dianne Nicol, Jantina de Vries, Anne Junker, Chiara Garattini, Jasper Bovenberg, Mahsa Shabani, Emmanuelle Lévesque, Bartha M Knoppers
Publication date
2016/3/25
Journal
Science
Volume
351
Issue
6280
Pages
1399-1400
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Historically, research ethics committees (RECs) have been guided by ethical principles regarding human experimentation intended to protect participants from physical harms and to provide assurance as to their interests and welfare. But research that analyzes large aggregate data sets, possibly including detailed clinical and genomic information of individuals, may require different assessment. At the same time, growth in international data-sharing collaborations adds stress to a system already under fire for subjecting multisite research to replicate ethics reviews, which can inhibit research without improving the quality of human subjects' protections (, ). “Top-down” national regulatory approaches exist for ethics review across multiple sites in domestic research projects [e.g., United States (, ), Canada , United Kingdom, , Australia ], but their applicability for data-intensive international research has not been …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ES Dove, D Townend, EM Meslin, M Bobrow, K Littler… - Science, 2016