Employee Management
RSSArticles
-
Ethics Champion Program Empowers Clinical Teams
As healthcare organizations become more complex, there is a greater need for ethical discussion. Ethics champion programs are one way of encouraging discussions.
-
Study: Trust in Physicians Declined When Industry Ties Reported
Research suggests that when patients know that individual doctors receive industry payments, the patients trusted those specific doctors less. The researchers found that transparency negatively affected both patient trust in their own doctors and in the medical profession.
-
Unique Informed Consent Challenges of Sequentially Randomized Trials
Some people initially appear to be good candidates for transplant. But complications of treatment may develop — changing the risk-benefit analysis. A repeat consent conference is necessary before each sequential randomization.
-
Legal Requirements May Conflict With Clinicians’ Ethical Obligations
It is simply not possible for clinicians to do the right thing if ethical principles and legal requirements are in direct conflict, experts say. But it is important not to lose sight of what the right thing is.
-
Remote Ethics Consults Help With Growing Demand for Onsite Ethics
Despite inherent limitations when the ethicist’s input comes instead from a screen or phone, some hospitals are moving toward remote ethics consults. Lack of robust ethics expertise onsite and a surge in demand are contributing factors.
-
New Tool Helps With Study Recruitment
Department of Energy researchers developed a new tool to connect cancer patients with clinical trials. The tool uses a Netflix-style of analytics to recommend studies that would be a good fit for particular patients.
-
Next Challenge for IRBs: Nanomedicine Research Risks
IRB members soon will see — if they haven’t already — protocols involving medical therapies with materials that are so tiny that a human hair is 80,000 times their width.
-
Diverse Populations Joining NIH All of Us
Nearly a quarter of a million people have joined the National Institutes of Health’s ambitious All of Us precision medicine initiative — with a large response from racial and ethnic minorities who have been historically victimized or ignored by human research.
-
Should IRBs Set an Incentive Pay Limit?
Not all IRBs and research institutions specifically address limits to how much researchers can compensate study participants. But allowing these limits to default to what is reportable to the IRS as income could be a mistake, one IRB chair says.
-
Electronic Informed Consent Platform Enhances Education and Engagement
Since Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center implemented the electronic informed consent process, thousands of research participants have consented electronically, increasing at a rate of about 500 per month.