Vol 15 Journal of Interpersonal Violence that came out this past summer is devoted to the issue of methodology, ethics, and legal issues in directly questioning children about abuse--. This might be helpful if the research involved interviews children. Issues around reporting, IRB considerations, and Certificate of Confidentiality are discussed. Des Runyan was the guest editor. lisa AJ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Lisa Amaya-Jackson, MD, MPH Asst. Professor Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center Director, Trauma Evaluation, Treatment, & Research Program Center for Child & Family Health, N.C.--Consortium of Duke, UNC-CH, and NCCU 3518 Westgate Dr., Suite 100, Durham, NC 27707 (919) 419-3474x405 FAX: (919) 419-9353 email: LAJ@xxxxxxxx * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * -----Original Message----- From: Steven J. Ondersma [SMTP:S.Ondersma@xxxxxxxxx] Sent: Friday, October 20, 2000 9:22 AM To: Child Maltreatment Researchers Subject: Re: Research Waiver The "waiver" you seek is called a certificate of confidentiality, and is not a state but a federal document, available through NIH regardless of whether or not they are funding the research (a list of names and numbers is below). The NIH states that the certificate has held up in test cases when state or local laws attempted to prevail. Essentially, the COC makes the bearer a voluntary rather than a mandated reporter for the approved research project. Approval is not automatic, of course--an application must be sent and approved. The ethical questions are obviously complex, but in part come down to whether the primary goal of research is to answer important research questions while protecting participants from harm due to the research itself, or whether the primary goal of research is to investigate and intervene. Faced with a mandate to report (and thus a requirement to warn participants of that mandate), many questions are simply not worth bothering to ask in a given research project (and worse, perhaps should not be asked given the ethical problems with research participation that leads to social harm), or are simply asked in conditions of complete anonymity (i.e., the researcher does not know the participant's name and does not have access to it). Do children ultimately benefit more when researchers simply can't ask certain questions or must ask them anonymously (thus removing any hope of longitudinal follow-up), or when those questions can be posed with true confidentiality? True confidentiality does not mean that researchers cannot attempt to provide assistance when concerns are present; it only means that they may discover things that otherwise could not have been known. There are professionals who should and do take identification and intervention with at-risk children as their primary goal. Whether researchers must also do so in all cases is an important question with ethical traps on both sides of the issue. ___________________________________ Steven J. Ondersma, Ph.D. Assistant Professor--Research Merrill-Palmer Institute Wayne State University 71 E. Ferry Ave. Detroit, MI 48202 Office: (313) 872-2706 Fax: (313) 875-0947 S.Ondersma@xxxxxxxxx www.mpi.wayne.edu Primary contact: Ms. Olga Boikess National Institute of Mental Health (301) 443-3877 Drug abuse research: Jacqueline Porter or Susan Solomon 301-443-2755 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Dr. Dorita Sewell 301-443-7023
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