Equality and Equity in Compensating Patient Engagement in Research: A Plea for Exceptionalism

IF 2.2 Q2 ETHICS Research Ethics Pub Date : 2021-11-18 DOI:10.1177/17470161211059993
J. Bélisle-Pipon, V. Couture, Marie-Christine Roy
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Abstract

Engaging citizens and patients in research has become a truism in many fields of health research. It is now seen as a laudable—if not compulsory—activity in research for yielding more impactful and meaningful citizen/patient outcomes and steering research in the right direction. Although this research approach is increasingly common and commendable, we recently encountered a major obstacle in obtaining an ethics certificate from an institutional review board (IRB) to conduct a study that places citizen/patient perspectives on equal footing with those of academic/policy experts. The obstacle was the interpretation of fairness in terms of compensation for research participation (i.e. honoraria). In terms of research ethics, this raised an important question: Should all types of participants be compensated equally, or should exceptions be made for citizen/patient participants? We argue that there are good reasons for exceptionalism and that clearer guidance on citizen/patient engagement in research should be embedded into research ethics doctrine.
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补偿患者参与研究的平等与公平:为例外论辩护
在许多卫生研究领域,让公民和患者参与研究已成为一个不言自明的事实。它现在被视为一项值得称赞的——如果不是强制性的——研究活动,因为它产生了更有影响力和有意义的公民/患者结果,并将研究引向正确的方向。虽然这种研究方法越来越普遍和值得赞扬,但我们最近遇到了一个主要障碍,即从机构审查委员会(IRB)获得道德证书,以进行一项将公民/患者的观点与学术/政策专家的观点平等对待的研究。障碍是在研究参与补偿(即酬金)方面对公平性的解释。就研究伦理而言,这提出了一个重要的问题:所有类型的参与者都应该得到平等的补偿,还是应该为公民/患者参与者提供例外?我们认为,例外论有很好的理由,并且应该将公民/患者参与研究的更明确指导嵌入到研究伦理学说中。
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来源期刊
Research Ethics
Research Ethics Arts and Humanities-Philosophy
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
11.80%
发文量
17
审稿时长
15 weeks
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