| Literature DB >> 16242014 |
Joses M Kirigia1, Charles Wambebe, Amido Baba-Moussa.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Regional Committee for Africa of the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2001 expressed concern that some health-related studies undertaken in the Region were not subjected to any form of ethics review. In 2003, the study reported in this paper was conducted to determine which Member country did not have a national research ethics committee (REC) with a view to guiding the WHO Regional Office in developing practical strategies for supporting those countries.Entities:
Keywords: Biomedical and Behavioral Research; Empirical Approach
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16242014 PMCID: PMC1274319 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6939-6-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Presence/absence of RECs
| Algeria | Yes |
| Angola | Yes |
| Botswana | Yes |
| Burkina Faso | Yes |
| Cameroon | Yes |
| Cape Verde | No |
| Chad | No |
| Congo | No |
| Democratic Republic of Congo | Yes |
| Ethiopia | Yes |
| Gambia | Yes |
| Guinea | Yes |
| Guinea Bissau | No |
| Guinea Equatorial | No |
| Kenya | Yes |
| Malawi | No |
| Mali | Yes |
| Mauritania | No |
| Mauritius | Yes |
| Mozambique | Yes |
| Niger | Yes |
| Rwanda | Yes |
| Sao Tome et Principe | No |
| Seychelles | Yes |
| Swaziland | No |
| Togo | No |
| Zambia | Yes |
| Zimbabwe | Yes |
Source: Survey data
Composition of research ethics committees in countries that reported their existence
| National medical research institute/council | 72% (13/18) |
| University | 61% (11/18) |
| National medical association | 44% (8/18) |
| Renowned researcher | 33% (6/18) |
| Social scientist | 50% (9/18) |
| Public health professional from ministry of health | 89% (16/18) |
| National bureau of standards | 11% (2/18) |
| WHO | 5% (1/18) |
| Attorney-general | 39% (7/18) |
| Others | 83% (15/18) |
Main functions of research ethics committees in countries that reported their existence
| Review and approve all research protocols on human subjects | 100% (18/18) |
| Ensure that projects sponsored by external donors are submitted for approval to ethical clearance committee of the initiating country | 5% (1/18) |
| Build the capacity of institutional and regional ethical clearance committees | 11% (2/18) |
| Give clearance for export of samples or specimens for research related to human health | 5% (1/18) |
| Coordinating and promoting research | 22% (4/18) |
Kruskal-Wallis pairwise comparisons between variables of the group of countries with a research ethics committee and the group without
| Maternal mortality per 100000 live births | 0.026144 | P = 0.8712 | not significant, accept H0 |
| Population in a country | 7.468966 | P = 0.0063 | Significant, reject H0 |
| Life expectancy at birth | 0.7468966 | P = 0.3876 | not significant, accept H0 |
| Probability of dying (per 1000) below age 5 years | 0.331125 | P = 0.565 | not significant, accept H0 |
| Probability of dying (per 1000) between age 15–60 years | 0.186207 | P = 0.6661 | not significant, accept H0 |
| Gross national income per capita (US$) | 0.111875 | P = 0.738 | not significant, accept H0 |
| Infant mortality per 1000 live births | 0.028161 | P = 0.8667 | not significant, accept H0 |
| Percentage of population aged 15+ years that is illiterate | 0.22623 | P = 0.6343 | not significant, accept H0 |
| Gross primary enrolment (% of school age population) | 2.712306 | P = 0.0996 | not significant, accept H0 |
Note: Total number of observations = 28.