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Howard Bauchner a Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD 20852, USA, b Division of General Pediatrics, Department of
Pediatrics, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02118, USA Correspondence to: H
Bauchner hbauchne{at}ahrq.gov
More than 500 journals have adopted the uniform
requirements of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors,
which stipulate that authors should "indicate whether the procedures followed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation."1
One major purpose of institutional review is to ensure that informed
consent is obtained when possible. We investigated how often research publications about child health report ethics committee approval or
informed consent.
We reviewed all research reports related to child health
(involving patients <18 years, pregnant women, or clinicians
providing care to children) published in 1999 in five American
journals (JAMA, New England Journal of Medicine,
Pediatrics, Journal of Pediatrics, Archives of
Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine). Each report was
reviewed independently by two research assistants for any statement
about informed consent or ethics committee approval; if either
statement was present, the report was categorised as having ethical
approval. An article that referred to another publication for more
details was not reviewed. This approach has been used previously.2 All five journals require studies with human
participants to report ethical approval. Reports not describing
approval were reviewed again by an investigator to ensure that errors
in categorisation of the studies had not been made. Studies were also
categorised according to design. The ethics committee at Boston
University School of Medicine judged that this project did not
represent research involving human subjects and did not require review.
The journals contained 561 research reports related to child health.
Overall, 340 (61%, range 53-66%) publications had ethical approval
(table). The proportion of studies reporting ethical approval was
dependent on the study type.
Despite increasing concern about the protection of human subjects,
40% of papers did not report ethical approval. These findings are
particularly unexpected, since all five journals explicitly ask authors
to document approval There are three possible explanations for the low proportion of papers
that do not report ethical approval. Approval may have been obtained,
but not reported Investigators may have failed to obtain and report ethical approval
because of confusion about the requirements. Nearly all investigators
obtained approval for randomised controlled trials, a study design
widely recognised to require safeguards. However, researchers may not
realise that ethics committee approval and informed consent may be
required for studies that do not enrol participants or that use large
datasets. Some of the prospective cohort studies without approval could
have been considered to be quality improvement projects
(audits), and there is no consensus about when
such projects become research. The Institute of Medicine recently said
that the project represents research and approval is necessary if the
investigator intends to publish the findings.4 Some
researchers may have deliberately disregarded ethical approval
standards and laws. Such occurrences are likely to be rare, but they
are not inconceivable.
Unless we enhance our system of safeguards, an unethical study could be
published. While the primary responsibility for assuring ethical
conduct of research rests with investigators, peer review journals
should be more active in protecting human subjects.
We have four recommendations to prevent unethical research being
published. Just as every article has a list of authors, every research
study should include a statement regarding human subjects. Articles
should not refer to other publications for information regarding
ethical approval. If the investigators believe that the research does
not need to be reviewed by the ethics committee, the reason for
exemption should be provided (however, we believe that investigators
should not make such a decision). Investigators should document
approval from the ethics committee and whether informed consent was
obtained Protecting participants in clinical research is, and must remain, one
of the highest priorities of medicine. As the final conduit of most
biomedical research, peer review journals can play a greater role in
protecting human participants by ensuring that every report of clinical
research contains a statement about the participants' protection.
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Methods and results
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Methods and results
Comment
References
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Comment
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Methods and results
Comment
References
24% of medical journals do not include such
instructions.3 Although we reviewed only American publications, we are not aware of data showing that papers published in
non-American journals report ethical approval more frequently.
this situation is likely to be rare and is
inconsistent with instructions to authors. Random non-reporting cannot
explain differences between study types.
as discussed previously,5 these are not synonymous.
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Acknowledgments |
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The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and not necessarily of Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality or US Department of Health and Human Services. We thank Dr Helen Burstin and Dr John Eisenberg for their review and comments, and our two research assistants, Josh Bauchner and Ian Zinn, who were invaluable.
Contributors: HB and JS contributed to all aspects of this project, including conception and design, data analysis, and writing of the paper. HB is the guarantor.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: Institutional National Research Service Award and Faculty Development Program Grant to Department of Pediatrics, Boston University School of Medicine.
Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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| 1. |
Rennie D, Yank V.
Disclosure to the reader of institutional review board approval and informed consent.
JAMA
1997;
277:
922-923 |
| 2. |
Olde Rikker MGM, ten Have HAMJ, Hoefnagels WHL.
Informed consent in biomedical studies on aging: survey of four journals.
BMJ
1996;
313:
1117 |
| 3. |
Amdur RJ, Biddle C.
Institutional review board approval and publication of human research results.
JAMA
1997;
277:
909-914 |
| 4. | Institute of Medicine. Protecting data privacy in health services research. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2000. |
| 5. |
Smith R.
Informed consent: the intricacies.
BMJ
1997;
314:
1059 |
(Accepted 14 May 2001)