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(2)The results from research have been known to produce harms to members of the sampled population who do not actually participate in the research study. An example of the type of research that could result in group harms by stigmatizing members of the group (even for individuals who do not participate in the research) is:

A study of the types and prevalence of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in small rural towns in a midwestern state.

(4)According to the federal regulations, which of the following studies meets the definition of research with human subjects?

A study of twenty 4th grade classrooms in which researchers ask the schools to systematically vary the time of day reading is taught, and collect weekly assessments of reading comprehension for each child over a three-month period.

(1)Which of the following are the three principles discussed in the Belmont Report?

Respect for Persons, Beneficence, Justice

(4)According to the federal regulations, which of the following studies meets the definition of research with human subjects?

An experiment is proposed on the relationship between gender-related stereotypes in math and the subsequent performance by males and females on math tests.

(3)Which is true of inducements in research?

Inducements constitute an "undue influence" if they alter a potential subject's decision-making processes, such that they do not appropriately weigh the risk-benefit relationship of the research.

(3)When an IRB is reviewing a research study and they are considering if a potential subject population is vulnerable, they should consider:

Is there a power differential between researchers and subjects?

(2)Which of the following studies has the LEAST potential to create group harm?

A Phase 3 clinical trial of a new anticancer agent in middle-aged women diagnosed with breast cancer.

(4)According to the federal regulations, which of the following studies meets the definition of research with human subjects?

A cognitive psychologist enrolls undergraduate students for a computer-based study about the effect of mood on problem-solving behaviors.

(6)How long is an investigator required to keep consent documents, IRB correspondence, and research records?

For a minimum of three years after completion of the study

(5)According to the federal regulations, research is eligible for exemption, if:

The research falls into one of eight categories of research activity described in the regulations.

(3)The NBAC looks at characteristics individuals might have that would prevent them from being able to provide voluntary informed consent. The traits may be thought of as falling into six broad areas: cognitive or communicative, institutional, deferential, medical, economic, and social. Prospective research subjects who are not able to comprehend information, deliberate, and make decisions about participation in a proposed research study have a:

Cognitive or communicative vulnerability

(3)In considering NBAC's analytic approach, an otherwise competent person who is acutely ill might be considered at especially high risk of harm for:

Situational cognitive vulnerability

(6)According to federal regulations, which of the following best describes when expedited review of a new, proposed study may be used by the IRB?

The study involves no more than minimal risk and meets one of the allowable categories of expedited review specified in federal regulations

(3)Subjects with a serious illness may be at risk for exploitation because they may be desperate for a possible cure. This is an example of:

Medical vulnerability

(3)Which is an example of a situation where deferential vulnerability might be a factor?

A physician recruiting patients to be subjects

(1)Which of the following is an example of how the principle of beneficence can be applied to a study employing human subjects?

Determining that the study has a maximization of benefits and a minimization of risks.

(6)A subject in a clinical research trial experiences a serious, unanticipated adverse drug experience. How should the investigator proceed, with respect to the IRB, after the discovery of the adverse event occurrence?

Report the adverse drug experience in a timely manner, in keeping with the IRB's policies and procedures, using the forms or the mechanism provided by the IRB.

(5)Continuing review of an approved and ongoing study posing more than minimal risk that was initially approved by a convened IRB:

Must occur within 12 months of the approval date.

(5)According to federal regulations, the expedited review process may be used when the study procedures pose:

No more than minimal risk and the research activities fall within regulatory categories identified as eligible.

(6)IRB continuing review of a greater than minimal risk approved protocol that is currently enrolling subjects must:

Occur at least annually.

(5)Which of the following statements about the relationship between an institution and the institution's IRB(s) is correct?

Officials of the institution may overrule an IRB approval.

(2)Which of the following practices can be effective in minimizing group harms?

Ongoing consultation, planning disclosure of research results, collaborative IRB review, community consultation

(1)The Belmont Report's principle of respect for persons incorporates at least two ethical convictions: first, that individuals should be treated as autonomous agents, and second, that:

Persons with diminished autonomy are entitled to protection.

(3)According to the authors, there are four common abuses that historically are described as giving rise to vulnerability. Which response below contains the correct four?

Physical control, coercion, undue influence, and manipulation

(3)Identify the following groups that are protected in the federal regulations (45 CFR 46), specifically in Subparts B, C, and D with additional protections:

Pregnant women, prisoners, children

(5)In addition to pregnant women, fetuses, and neonates, another subpart of the HHS regulations provides additional protections for which of the following vulnerable populations?

Prisoners

(4)A medical record is an example of:

Private information

(4)A researcher is interested in assessing risk-taking by individuals. The researcher is sitting on a bench near a busy four-way stop intersection. She plans on recording the number of bike riders wearing a safety helmet and whether they stop at the intersection before proceeding in order to correlate use of safety apparel with risk-taking. This collection of information is an example of:

Public behavior

(4)A census is a regularly-occurring and official count of a particular population. Census data available at the United States Census Bureau website are an example of:

Public information

(4)A professor at Big State University is writing a biography about Bill Gates and conducting oral histories with all of Bill Gates' friends, family members, and business acquaintances. The researcher submits the research proposal to the institution's IRB. What action can he expect by the IRB?

The IRB will not review this study because it is not research as defined by the federal regulations.

(6)Amendments involving changes to IRB-approved protocols do NOT need prior IRB approval if:

The changes must be immediately implemented for the health and well-being of the subject.


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