Perspectives of Resident and Attending Ophthalmologists on Common Ethical Dilemmas in Research.

Journal of academic ophthalmology (2017) Pub Date : 2023-11-07 eCollection Date: 2023-07-01 DOI:10.1055/s-0043-1774394
Sarah C Miller, Brittany C Tsou, Michael J Fliotsos, Gary L Legault, Jiangxia Wang, Todd J Mondzelewski, Patrick D Munson, Alice Lorch, Laura K Green, Won I Kim, Ron W Pelton, Fasika A Woreta, Grant A Justin
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Abstract

Purpose  To assess how resident and attending ophthalmologists perceive and evaluate ethically controversial scenarios regarding mentorship, authorship, and ethics compliance that may occur during research involving residents. Methods  An online survey was developed and contained 14 controversial vignettes based on common research scenarios that can occur when conducting research with trainees. The scenarios were designed to capture issues regarding three themes: mentorship, authorship, and compliance with ethical guidelines. Resident and attending ophthalmologists at eight military and civilian academic residency programs in the United States were invited to participate. Respondents used a Likert scale to assess the ethicality of the situations in addition to self-reported demographic characteristics. Results  The response rate was 35.6% (77/216), consisting of 37.7% ( n  = 29) residents and 62.3% ( n  = 48) attendings. More attending ophthalmologists responded than residents ( p  = 0.004). Many respondents identified controversies around compliance (67.3%) and authorship (57.1%) as unethical, whereas situations regarding mentorship were largely viewed as neutral to ethical (68.0%). Responses to two scenarios, one regarding mentorship and one regarding authorship, significantly differed between residents and attendings ( p  = 0.001 and p  = 0.022, respectively). Conclusion  Academic ophthalmologists' perceptions of the ethicality of common research scenarios varied. There is a need for more prescriptive guidelines for authorship and mentorship ethics at all training levels to ensure consistency, fairness, and integrity of research.

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Abstract Image

住院和主治眼科医生对研究中常见伦理困境的看法。
意图 评估住院医生和主治眼科医生如何看待和评估在涉及住院医生的研究过程中可能出现的关于指导、作者身份和道德合规性的道德争议场景。方法 根据与受训人员进行研究时可能出现的常见研究场景,开发了一项在线调查,其中包含14个有争议的小插曲。这些场景旨在捕捉三个主题的问题:导师制、作者身份和遵守道德准则。美国八个军事和民用学术住院项目的住院医生和主治眼科医生受邀参加。除了自我报告的人口统计特征外,受访者还使用Likert量表来评估情况的道德性。后果 有效率为35.6%(77/216),其中37.7%(n = 29)居民和62.3%(n = 48)出席。主治眼科医生的反应多于住院医生(p = 0.004)。许多受访者认为,围绕合规性(67.3%)和作者身份(57.1%)的争议是不道德的,而关于导师制的情况在很大程度上被认为是中立的,符合道德的(68.0%)。对两种情况(一种是关于导师制,另一种是作者身份)的反应在居民和参与者之间存在显著差异(p = 0.001和p = 0.022)。结论 学术眼科医生对常见研究场景的伦理性的看法各不相同。需要为所有培训级别的作者和导师道德制定更具规范性的指导方针,以确保研究的一致性、公平性和完整性。
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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