| Literature DB >> 16127856 |
Arlene Stiffman1, Eddie Brown, Catherine Woodstock Striley, Emily Ostmann, Gina Chowa.
Abstract
A study of American Indian youths illustrates competing pressures between research and ethics. A stakeholder-researcher team developed three plans to protect participants. The first allowed participants to skip potentially upsetting interview sections. The second called for participants to skip potentially upsetting interview sections. The second called for participants flagged for abuse or suicidality to receive referrals, emergency 24-hr clinical backup, or both. The third, based on the community's desire to promote service access, included giving participants a list of service resources. Interviewers gave referrals to participants flagged as having mild problems, and reported participants with serious problems to supervisors for clinical backup. Participants seldom chose to skip sections, so data integrity was not compromised. However, participants did have more problems than expected (e.g., 1 in 3 had thought about suicide, 1 in 5 had attempted suicide, and 1 in 4 reported abuse), so service agencies were not equipped to respond. Researchers must accept the competing pressures and find ethically appropriate compromises that will not undermine research integrity.Entities:
Keywords: Biomedical and Behavioral Research; Empirical Approach
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16127856 DOI: 10.1207/s15327019eb1501_1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ethics Behav ISSN: 1050-8422