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      Victor Frankenstein’s Institutional Review Board Proposal, 1790

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      Science and Engineering Ethics
      Springer Nature

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          Most cited references15

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          Ethics and clinical research.

          H BEECHER (1966)
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            Burdens on research imposed by institutional review boards: the state of the evidence and its implications for regulatory reform.

            Federal regulations mandate independent review and approval by an "institutional review board" (IRB) before studies that involve human research subjects may begin. Although many researchers strongly support the need for IRB review, they also contend that it is burdensome when it imposes costs that do not add to the protections afforded to research participants and that this burden threatens the viability of research. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recently announced its intention to reform the regulations governing IRB review. We used a search of the PubMed database, supplemented by a bibliographic review, to identify all existing primary data on the costs of IRB review. "Costs" were broadly defined to include both expenditures of time or money and constraints imposed on the scope of the research. Burdensome costs were limited to those that did not contribute to greater protections for the participants. Evidence from a total of fifty-two studies shows that IRBs operate at different levels of efficiency; that waiting to obtain IRB approval has, in some instances, delayed project initiation; that IRBs presented with identical protocols sometimes asked for different and even competing revisions; and that some decisions made (and positions held) by IRBs are not in accord with federal policy guidance. While the evidence is sufficient to conclude that there is burden associated with IRB review, it is too limited to allow for valid estimates of its magnitude or to serve as the basis for formulating policies on IRB reform. The single exception is multicenter research, for which we found that review by several local IRBs is likely to be burdensome. No mechanism currently exists at the national level to gather systematic evidence on the intersection between research and IRB review. This gap is of concern in light of the changing nature of research and the increasingly important role that research is envisioned to play in improving the overall quality of health care. © 2011 Milbank Memorial Fund.
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              Reforming the regulations governing research with human subjects.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Science and Engineering Ethics
                Sci Eng Ethics
                Springer Nature
                1353-3452
                1471-5546
                October 2015
                September 14 2014
                October 2015
                : 21
                : 5
                : 1139-1157
                Article
                10.1007/s11948-014-9588-y
                fd250b54-c4d6-4223-a614-062a866ad222
                © 2015
                History

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