Josephine Nayiga, Stephen Okoboi, Grace Banturaki, Pauline Byakika-Kibwika, Barbara Castelnuovo
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Participants included former and current trainees who have conducted research with PLWH within the past five years. Data collected included self-rated bioethics knowledge, frequency of encountering bioethical challenges, confidence in addressing challenges across vulnerable populations, and preferred training topics and delivery formats. Descriptive data analysis was performed using STATA Version 17.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>We attained a response rate of 67.5% (108/160). While 75.9% reported formal bioethics training, 58.3% rated their knowledge moderate. Frequently encountered challenges included maintaining confidentiality and privacy (61.1%), conducting informed consent processes (56.1%), applying bioethical principles, engaging with communities (54.6%), and selecting appropriate research participants (51.4%). Confidence in addressing bioethical challenges was notably lower for vulnerable populations than for general HIV research. Confidence of the trainees was higher in research involving older PLWH and pregnant/lactating women, moderate with children/adolescents and hospitalized individuals, and very low with key populations. Trainees expressed limited confidence in addressing cultural sensitivity, stigma, coercion, community engagement, harm monitoring, and compensation for research-related harm across all the populations. Top training priorities included ethical issues with research involving vulnerable populations (97.2%), reporting ethical concerns (94.4%), community engagement (93.6%), research on stored samples/data (94.5%), and stigma/discrimination (92.6%). Preferred formats were in-person workshops, interactive case-based scenarios, and online courses.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Trainees faced diverse bioethical challenges and exhibited varying confidence levels in addressing these issues across different vulnerable populations. 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We assessed bioethics training needs for trainees engaged in HIV research from the School of Medicine (SoM) of Makerere University and the Infectious Disease Institute (IDI) to inform the development of a comprehensive bioethics training program for trainees.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>A cross-sectional quantitative study was conducted from March to May 2024 using an online structured questionnaire distributed via Google Forms. Participants included former and current trainees who have conducted research with PLWH within the past five years. Data collected included self-rated bioethics knowledge, frequency of encountering bioethical challenges, confidence in addressing challenges across vulnerable populations, and preferred training topics and delivery formats. Descriptive data analysis was performed using STATA Version 17.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>We attained a response rate of 67.5% (108/160). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:涉及弱势人群艾滋病毒感染者(PLWH)的研究,如儿童、青少年、老年人、孕妇和哺乳期妇女、住院患者和关键人群,提出了复杂的生物伦理挑战。我们评估了马凯雷雷大学医学院(SoM)和传染病研究所(IDI)从事艾滋病毒研究的学员的生物伦理培训需求,为制定全面的学员生物伦理培训计划提供信息。方法:采用横断面定量研究,于2024年3月至5月通过谷歌Forms发放在线结构化问卷。参与者包括在过去五年内与PLWH进行研究的前任和现任学员。收集的数据包括自评生物伦理知识、遇到生物伦理挑战的频率、应对弱势群体挑战的信心以及首选的培训主题和交付形式。描述性数据分析使用STATA Version 17进行。结果:有效率为67.5%(108/160)。75.9%的人接受过正规的生物伦理学培训,58.3%的人认为他们的知识一般。经常遇到的挑战包括保持保密和隐私(61.1%),进行知情同意程序(56.1%),应用生物伦理原则,与社区接触(54.6%),以及选择合适的研究参与者(51.4%)。弱势群体在应对生物伦理挑战方面的信心明显低于一般艾滋病毒研究。在涉及老年PLWH和孕妇/哺乳期妇女的研究中,受训者的信心较高,在涉及儿童/青少年和住院个体的研究中,受训者的信心中等,在涉及关键人群的研究中,受训者的信心很低。受训者表示,在解决所有人群的文化敏感性、污名化、胁迫、社区参与、损害监测以及与研究相关的损害补偿方面,他们的信心有限。最重要的培训重点包括涉及弱势群体研究的伦理问题(97.2%)、报告伦理问题(94.4%)、社区参与(93.6%)、对存储样本/数据的研究(94.5%)和污名/歧视(92.6%)。首选的形式是面对面的研讨会、基于案例的交互式场景和在线课程。结论:学员面临不同的生物伦理挑战,并在不同的弱势群体中表现出不同的信心水平。这些发现强调了有针对性的、针对具体情况的生物伦理学培训的必要性,这些培训适合于对脆弱的PLWH进行研究。这项研究为制定一项全面的培训计划提供了信息,以改善乌干达艾滋病毒研究的道德行为。临床试验号:不适用。
Bioethics training needs assessment for HIV research in vulnerable populations: a survey of trainees at college of health sciences, Makerere university.
Background: Research involving vulnerable populations of people living with HIV (PLWH), such as children, adolescents, older adults, pregnant and lactating women, hospitalized patients, and key populations, presents complex bioethical challenges. We assessed bioethics training needs for trainees engaged in HIV research from the School of Medicine (SoM) of Makerere University and the Infectious Disease Institute (IDI) to inform the development of a comprehensive bioethics training program for trainees.
Methods: A cross-sectional quantitative study was conducted from March to May 2024 using an online structured questionnaire distributed via Google Forms. Participants included former and current trainees who have conducted research with PLWH within the past five years. Data collected included self-rated bioethics knowledge, frequency of encountering bioethical challenges, confidence in addressing challenges across vulnerable populations, and preferred training topics and delivery formats. Descriptive data analysis was performed using STATA Version 17.
Results: We attained a response rate of 67.5% (108/160). While 75.9% reported formal bioethics training, 58.3% rated their knowledge moderate. Frequently encountered challenges included maintaining confidentiality and privacy (61.1%), conducting informed consent processes (56.1%), applying bioethical principles, engaging with communities (54.6%), and selecting appropriate research participants (51.4%). Confidence in addressing bioethical challenges was notably lower for vulnerable populations than for general HIV research. Confidence of the trainees was higher in research involving older PLWH and pregnant/lactating women, moderate with children/adolescents and hospitalized individuals, and very low with key populations. Trainees expressed limited confidence in addressing cultural sensitivity, stigma, coercion, community engagement, harm monitoring, and compensation for research-related harm across all the populations. Top training priorities included ethical issues with research involving vulnerable populations (97.2%), reporting ethical concerns (94.4%), community engagement (93.6%), research on stored samples/data (94.5%), and stigma/discrimination (92.6%). Preferred formats were in-person workshops, interactive case-based scenarios, and online courses.
Conclusion: Trainees faced diverse bioethical challenges and exhibited varying confidence levels in addressing these issues across different vulnerable populations. These findings underscore the need for targeted, context-specific bioethics training tailored to conducting research with vulnerable PLWH. This study has informed the development of a comprehensive training program to improve the ethical conduct of HIV research in Uganda.
期刊介绍:
BMC Medical Ethics is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in relation to the ethical aspects of biomedical research and clinical practice, including professional choices and conduct, medical technologies, healthcare systems and health policies.