IRB Advisor – May 1, 2012
May 1, 2012
View Issues
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IRB tackles readability of informed consent forms
IRBs continue to see informed consent (IC) forms that require high school or college reading skills when nearly half of Americans can read no higher than a 5th grade level, an IRB chair says. -
IRB develops pre-review screening process
IRBs have full schedules, and the little mistakes investigators make when applying for an approval can bog down the process, adding weeks and resulting in wasted time. As one IRB office has discovered, a solution that can reduce turnaround time and improve efficiency involves the use of a pre-review screening process. -
IRB offices can educate clinical research teams
One of the key attributes of a strong human research protection program is an institution's ability to optimize its resources, an expert says. -
Incidental findings in genomic research
As the technology that enables genetic research becomes more sophisticated, it opens a kind of Pandora's box to researchers telling us information about subjects that they weren't looking for and may not necessarily want to know. -
Parents find value in children's health surveys
IRBs frequently worry that questioning subjects who have undergone physical or emotional trauma can cause distress, but research has shown that such questions do not tend to cause additional damage to subjects. -
Research slowed by military IRBs' requirements
Many researchers have stories about the challenges of getting reviews from multiple IRBs for a study the differing standards, varying risk assessments and the duplicated paperwork. -
Program uses systems approach training
When Jill Matzat was monitoring clinical studies, she approached it the way she had approached her work in the lab and as a nurse.