The Need to Track Payment Incentives to Participate in HIV Research.

IRB Pub Date : 2018-07-01
Brandon Brown, Jerome T Galea, Karine Dubé, Peter Davidson, Kaveh Khoshnood, Lisa Holtzman, Logan Marg, Jeff Taylor
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Abstract

Providing incentives is an accepted and common practice in human subjects research, including clinical HIV research. While we know that financial incentives among similar studies can greatly vary, surprisingly little research exists on how to determine when such incentives are excessive or constitute an "undue inducement." Multiple factors, such as risks and benefits, study procedures, study budget, historical precedent, recommendations from institutional review boards, advice from other investigators, and local regulations may influence decisions about appropriate incentives, but little empirical data exist about what incentives are offered to potential research participants. Rules for acceptable gifts, services, and compensation should consider study location and population, but without a clearer understanding of currently offered incentives and how these practices match up to ethical beliefs of appropriateness, we continue to follow perceived trends without critical assessment. Here, we present one potential approach to explore the impact of financial incentives on biomedical HIV research and to further clarify undue inducement: the development of a framework to support ethical decision-making about payment to participate. This framework is based on input from people living with HIV, biomedical HIV researchers, ethicists, former study participants, and IRB members and includes a database that allows for tracking payment practices.

跟踪参与艾滋病研究的支付激励措施的必要性。
在人类受试者研究中,包括临床艾滋病毒研究中,提供奖励是一种公认和普遍的做法。虽然我们知道,在类似的研究中,经济激励可能会有很大的不同,但令人惊讶的是,关于如何确定这种激励何时过度或构成“不当诱因”的研究却很少。多种因素,如风险和收益、研究程序、研究预算、历史先例、机构审查委员会的建议、其他研究者的建议和地方法规可能会影响适当激励的决定,但关于向潜在研究参与者提供何种激励的经验数据很少。可接受的礼物、服务和补偿的规则应该考虑研究地点和人口,但如果没有更清楚地了解目前提供的激励措施,以及这些做法如何与适当的道德信念相匹配,我们就会在没有批判性评估的情况下继续遵循感知到的趋势。在这里,我们提出了一种潜在的方法来探索财政激励对生物医学艾滋病毒研究的影响,并进一步澄清不正当的诱因:制定一个框架来支持有关参与支付的道德决策。该框架基于艾滋病毒感染者、艾滋病毒生物医学研究人员、伦理学家、前研究参与者和IRB成员的输入,并包括一个允许跟踪支付实践的数据库。
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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