| Literature DB >> 33535867 |
Brandon Brown1, Logan Marg1, Emily Michels2, Zhiwei Zhang1, Dario Kuzmanović3, Karine Dubé4, Jerome T Galea5.
Abstract
Given the dearth of regulatory guidance and empirical research on practices of providing payments to research participants, our study aimed to examine whether there were significant differences in payment amounts between sociobehavioral and biomedical studies and to examine study factors that may explain payment differences. This study reviewed 100 sociobehavioral and 31 biomedical protocols. Results showed that both biomedical studies and sociobehavioral studies had a wide variation of payments and, on average, the biomedical studies paid significantly more. Additionally, more biomedical studies offered payment than sociobehavioral studies. The primary factors that explained differences in payment amounts between sociobehavioral and biomedical studies were the number of study visits, study time, participation type, risk level, and research method. These findings provide pilot data to help inform future ethical decision-making and guidance regarding payment practices.Entities:
Keywords: behavioral social science research; federal policies/guidelines/office of human research protections; other behavioral/biomedical science; payment for research participation; research ethics
Year: 2021 PMID: 33535867 DOI: 10.1177/1556264620987773
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Empir Res Hum Res Ethics ISSN: 1556-2646 Impact factor: 1.742