| Literature DB >> 28948532 |
Heidi Carmen Howard1, Deborah Mascalzoni2, Laurence Mabile3, Gry Houeland4, Emmanuelle Rial-Sebbag3, Anne Cambon-Thomsen3,5.
Abstract
Currently, a great deal of biomedical research in fields such as epidemiology, clinical trials and genetics is reliant on vast amounts of biological and phenotypic information collected and assembled in biobanks. While many resources are being invested to ensure that comprehensive and well-organised biobanks are able to provide increased access to, and sharing of biomedical samples and information, many barriers and challenges remain to such responsible and extensive sharing. Germane to the discussion herein is the barrier to collecting and sharing bioresources related to the lack of proper recognition of researchers and clinicians who developed the bioresource. Indeed, the efforts and resources invested to set up and sustain a bioresource can be enormous and such work should be easily traced and properly recognised. However, there is currently no such system that systematically and accurately traces and attributes recognition to those doing this work or the bioresource institution itself. As a beginning of a solution to the "recognition problem", the Bioresource Research Impact Factor/Framework (BRIF) initiative was proposed almost a decade and a half ago and is currently under further development. With the ultimate aim of increasing awareness and understanding of the BRIF, in this article, we contribute the following: (1) a review of the objectives and functions of the BRIF including the description of two tools that will help in the deployment of the BRIF, the CoBRA (Citation of BioResources in journal Articles) guideline, and the Open Journal of Bioresources (OJB); (2) the results of a small empirical study on stakeholder awareness of the BRIF and (3) a brief analysis of the ethical dimensions of the BRIF which allow it to be a positive contribution to responsible biobanking.Entities:
Keywords: BRIF; Biobank; Bioresource Research Impact Factor; Bioresource sharing; Ethics; Recognition
Year: 2017 PMID: 28948532 PMCID: PMC5849702 DOI: 10.1007/s12687-017-0332-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Genet ISSN: 1868-310X
Fig. 1Summary of the tools that contribute to the BRIF initiative. Different tools (in boxes) have been developed to help in the development of the BRIF initiative towards a functional system of recognition of bioresources. The BRIF initiative is still in development and the existing tools include the following: (1) the CoBRA guidelines which give instructions on how to cite bioresources, http://www.equator-network.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Cobra-check-list.pdf and (2) the Open Journal of Bioresources which publishes the description of different bioresources so that this publication can then be cited. Additional tools and resources will be identified and/or developed to help make the BRIF initiative funcational (e.g. DOI numbers, DataCite)
| “I think it can make the research ‘easier’, ‘faster’” |
| “To enhance experts’ willingness to contribute to databases” |
| “Because of the important work for such infrastructure may be better acknowledged” |
| “Good to have an appropriate measurement system” |
| “It could help in the collaboration between researchers & biobanks” |
| “It increases awareness of available resources” |
| “It will provide a common stage to reference” |
| “It would create good incentives for biobank use” |
| It would “avoid identical data in multiple study merged analysis” |