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  • Social Media Research Presents Many Unresolved Ethical Issues

    Direct-to-consumer wellness products, location-tracking apps, and access to personal data on social networks present both exciting opportunities and significant ethical worries for researchers. The authors of a recent paper proposed steps the scientific community can take to ensure social media data are used ethically. The paper was prompted in part by the recent Cambridge Analytica scandal, involving allegations that the firm used data improperly obtained from Facebook to build voter profiles.

  • Testing an Intervention to Reinforce Ethical Research Practices

    Historically, the value of scientific research has been undermined to some degree by lack of reproducible results, unpublished data, and studies that achieve statistical significance but are false positives. Some of these trends are fueled by researchers’ acceptance of “questionable research practices (QRPs),” researchers noted in a recent study.

  • Ensure Study Participants Understand That Biobanking Is Research

    In a recent study, parents in a pediatric ICU were approached to give consent to storage of their children’s specimens in a biobank for future research. In surveying parents afterward, the researchers found that almost half of those asked about the biobank did not seem to understand that storage of clinical specimens was a research pursuit.

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  • Small IRB Shows How to Handle Challenges

    One small IRB has evolved in less than a decade from a board that had no full-time or part-time IRB professionals to having its own IRB administrator with part-time assistance. Limited staffing is one of the top challenges of small research programs.

  • IRB Methods for Reviewing Gun Violence Study Protocols

    Gun violence researchers must be sensitive to the emotional risks of participants.

  • IRBs Can Expect Increase in Gun Violence Studies

    In 2018, a spending bill allowed for research by the CDC into the causes of gun violence, paving the way for new studies to explore the issue. IRBs will need to anticipate these protocols and better understand risks and ethical issues involved in gun research.

  • CDC Drops Routine Annual Tuberculosis Testing of Healthcare Workers

    The agency is dropping routine screening in favor of testing on hire, and after TB exposure or ongoing transmission. In updating 2005 TB guidelines, the CDC screening change was expected as the disease continues to decline nationally and healthcare workers appear to be at no greater risk of transmission than the general public.

  • Surgeons’ Negative Attitudes Can Lead to Higher Infection Rates

    “Surgeons who model unprofessional behaviors may help to undermine a culture of safety, threaten teamwork, and thereby increase risk for medical errors and surgical complications," according to authors of a recent study.

  • Infection Prevention: The Past Is Prelude

    Looking to the past and the present, Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC) President Karen Hoffmann, RN, MS, CIC, FSHEA, FAPIC, recently gave a keynote address in Philadelphia at the annual APIC conference. Hoffman also is an infection prevention consultant for the Survey and Certification Group at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and a clinical instructor in the division of infectious diseases at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine.