Paying Research Participants: Regulatory Uncertainty, Conceptual Confusion, and a Path Forward.

Emily A Largent, Holly Fernandez Lynch
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Abstract

The practice of offering payment to individuals in exchange for their participation in clinical research is widespread and longstanding. Nevertheless, such payment remains the source of substantial debate, in particular about whether or the extent to which offers of payment coerce and/or unduly induce individuals to participate. Yet, the various laws, regulations, and ethical guidelines that govern the conduct of human subjects research offer relatively little in the way of specific guidance regarding what makes a payment offer ethically acceptable-or not. Moreover, there is a lack of definitional agreement regarding what the terms coercion and undue inducement mean in the human subjects research context. It is, therefore, unsurprising that investigators and Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) experience confusion about how to evaluate offers of payment, and lean toward conservative approaches. These trends are exemplified by our pilot data regarding the ways in which some IRB members and investigators (mis)understand the concepts of coercion and undue inducement, as well as the ways in which certain research institutions oversee offers of payment at a local level. This article systematically examines the legal and ethical dimensions of offering payment to research participants. It argues that many concerns about offers of payment to research participants can be attributed to the misguided view that such offers ought to be treated differently than offers of payment in other contexts, a form of "research exceptionalism." We show that rejection of research exceptionalism with respect to payment helps settle open debates about both how best to define coercion and undue influence, and how to understand the relation between these concepts and offers of payment. We argue for adoption of our preferred definitions, ideally by regulatory authorities, and against the conventional conservatism toward payment of research participants. Instead, we draw attention to the rarely asked, even radical, question: are research participants paid enough? We conclude by arguing that we ought to change the default to favor, rather than encourage suspicion of, offers of payment to research participants.

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Abstract Image

付费研究参与者:监管不确定性、概念混淆和前进道路。
向个人提供报酬以换取他们参与临床研究的做法是普遍和长期存在的。然而,这种付款仍然是大量辩论的根源,特别是关于提供付款是否或在多大程度上强迫和/或不适当地诱使个人参与。然而,管理人类受试者研究行为的各种法律、法规和道德准则,在关于什么使支付行为在道德上可接受或不可接受的具体指导方面,提供的指导相对较少。此外,在人类受试者研究背景下,关于胁迫和不当诱导这两个术语的含义缺乏定义一致。因此,调查人员和机构审查委员会(irb)对如何评估支付方案感到困惑,并倾向于保守的方法,这并不奇怪。我们的试点数据表明,一些内部审查委员会成员和调查人员(错误地)理解胁迫和不正当引诱的概念,以及某些研究机构在地方一级监督付款的方式,说明了这些趋势。本文系统地考察了向研究参与者提供报酬的法律和道德层面。它认为,许多关于向研究参与者提供报酬的担忧可以归因于一种被误导的观点,即这种提议应该与其他情况下的支付提议区别对待,这是一种“研究例外论”。我们表明,拒绝关于支付的研究例外主义有助于解决关于如何最好地定义强迫和不当影响,以及如何理解这些概念与支付提议之间关系的公开辩论。我们主张采用我们偏好的定义,理想情况下由监管机构采用,并反对传统的保守主义对研究参与者的支付。相反,我们把注意力吸引到一个很少被问到,甚至是激进的问题上:研究参与者的报酬是否足够?我们的结论是,我们应该改变默认情况,支持而不是鼓励对研究参与者提供报酬的怀疑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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