Navigating ethical and legal challenges in the HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study: Lessons learned from the ethics, law, policy working group

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-10-21 DOI:10.1016/j.dcn.2024.101460
Jenny Kingsley , Barbara Andraka-Christou , Seema K. Shah , Paul Spicer , Sharlene Newman , Pilar N. Ossorio , The HBCD ELP WG
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Abstract

The HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) Study, a multi-site prospective longitudinal cohort study, will examine human brain, cognitive, behavioral, social, and emotional development beginning prenatally and planned through early childhood. The HBCD study has faced several ethical and legal challenges due to its goal of enrolling pregnant people (including those with substance use disorder) and their newborns. Challenges not fully anticipated at the outset emerged from the rapidly changing legal landscape around reproductive rights in the United States. By embedding scholars in bioethics and law within research teams and engaging them in conversation with each other and other study personnel, we were able to address many challenges proactively and respond promptly to unanticipated challenges. In this paper, we highlight several important ethical and legal challenges that arose from the first phase of funding through the beginning of participant enrollment. We explain the methods used to address these challenges, the ethical and legal tradeoffs that arose, and the resolution of challenges through the design of the study. Based on this experience, we provide recommendations for research teams, sponsors, and reviewers to address legal risks and promote the ethical conduct of studies with pregnant people and caregivers. We highlight the importance of collaboration with bioethics and legal scholars in studies involving complex and evolving legal risks, as well as the necessity of designing robust approaches to informed consent and maintaining participant trust while navigating ethical challenges in research.
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在 HEALthy 脑与儿童发育研究中应对伦理和法律挑战:伦理、法律、政策工作组的经验教训。
HEALthy Brain and Child Development(HBCD)研究是一项多站点前瞻性纵向队列研究,将从产前开始并计划到幼儿期对人类大脑、认知、行为、社交和情感发育进行研究。由于 HBCD 研究的目标是招募孕妇(包括药物滥用症患者)及其新生儿,因此面临着一些伦理和法律方面的挑战。由于美国围绕生殖权利的法律环境变化迅速,因此出现了一些一开始没有完全预料到的挑战。通过将生命伦理学和法学学者纳入研究团队,并让他们与其他研究人员相互交流,我们能够积极应对许多挑战,并对未预料到的挑战做出迅速反应。在本文中,我们将重点介绍从第一阶段筹资到开始招募参与者期间出现的几个重要的伦理和法律挑战。我们解释了应对这些挑战的方法、出现的伦理和法律权衡,以及通过研究设计解决挑战的方法。基于这些经验,我们为研究团队、申办者和评审人员提供了建议,以应对法律风险并促进孕妇和护理人员研究的伦理进行。我们强调了在涉及复杂和不断变化的法律风险的研究中与生命伦理学和法律学者合作的重要性,以及在应对研究中的伦理挑战时设计强有力的知情同意方法和维护参与者信任的必要性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
10.60%
发文量
124
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal publishes theoretical and research papers on cognitive brain development, from infancy through childhood and adolescence and into adulthood. It covers neurocognitive development and neurocognitive processing in both typical and atypical development, including social and affective aspects. Appropriate methodologies for the journal include, but are not limited to, functional neuroimaging (fMRI and MEG), electrophysiology (EEG and ERP), NIRS and transcranial magnetic stimulation, as well as other basic neuroscience approaches using cellular and animal models that directly address cognitive brain development, patient studies, case studies, post-mortem studies and pharmacological studies.
期刊最新文献
Establishing a model of peer support for pregnant persons with a substance use disorder as an innovative approach for engaging participants in the healthy brain and child development study. Co-developing sleep-wake and sensory foundations for cognition in the human fetus and newborn. State-dependent inter-network functional connectivity development in neonatal brain from the developing human connectome project. How will developmental neuroimaging contribute to the prediction of neurodevelopmental or psychiatric disorders? Challenges and opportunities. Harmonizing multisite neonatal diffusion-weighted brain MRI data for developmental neuroscience.
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