Reflections on research ethics in a public health emergency: Experiences of Brazilian women affected by Zika

IF 0.9 3区 哲学 Q3 ETHICS Developing World Bioethics Pub Date : 2022-06-28 DOI:10.1111/dewb.12361
Ilana Ambrogi, Luciana Brito, Sergio Rego
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Abstract

In Brazil, the epicenter of the Zika crisis, brown, black, and indigenous poor women living in municipalities with scarce resources were disproportionally affected. The gendered consequences of the epidemic exposed how intersectional lenses are central to understand the impact of public health emergencies in the lives of women and girls. The demand for Zika-affected children and women to be research participants is relevant for an ethical analysis of participant protection procedures during a crisis. We investigated how women experienced research participation by analyzing their narratives. Two-year-long longitudinal qualitative study in Brazilian sites located in the epidemic's epicenter was performed using mixed methods: ethnography with women from two distinct states and individual semi-structured interviews with five women in different Zika-affected states, four of which were community leaders. All women in the study were mothers or grandmothers of Zika-affected children. Thematic analysis was used for data evaluation. Women perceived being pressured to participate in research and a lack of benefit sharing. Structural determinants of gender inequality, such as its effect on power distribution, were found to impact research participant protection. Formal procedures for research protocols approvals were insufficient in protecting participants because these instruments were unable to account for structural aspects. Communitarian mobilization, through WhatsApp groups, was found to be an important mechanism to create conditions to challenge oppressive structures. Strengthening public health, effective community-based participation in research planning and implantation of ethical strategies that promotes gender equality can have transformative effect on unequal power structures and promote participant protection.

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突发公共卫生事件中对研究伦理的反思:受寨卡病毒影响的巴西妇女的经历
在寨卡病毒危机的中心巴西,生活在资源匮乏的城市中的棕色人种、黑人和土著贫困妇女受到了不成比例的影响。这一流行病的性别后果暴露了跨部门视角是如何理解公共卫生紧急情况对妇女和女孩生活影响的核心。要求受寨卡病毒影响的儿童和妇女成为研究参与者,这与危机期间参与者保护程序的伦理分析有关。我们通过分析女性的叙述来调查她们是如何体验研究参与的。在位于疫情中心的巴西地点进行了为期两年的纵向定性研究,采用了混合方法:对来自两个不同州的女性进行民族志研究,并对不同寨卡病毒感染州的五名女性进行了个人半结构化访谈,其中四名是社区领袖。研究中的所有女性都是寨卡病毒感染儿童的母亲或祖母。专题分析用于数据评估。妇女感到参与研究的压力很大,而且缺乏利益分享。性别不平等的结构性决定因素,如其对权力分配的影响,被发现会影响研究参与者的保护。研究方案批准的正式程序不足以保护参与者,因为这些文书无法考虑结构方面。通过WhatsApp群组进行的社群主义动员被发现是创造条件挑战压迫性结构的重要机制。加强公共卫生、以社区为基础有效参与研究规划和实施促进性别平等的道德战略,可以对不平等的权力结构产生变革性影响,并促进参与者保护。
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来源期刊
Developing World Bioethics
Developing World Bioethics 医学-医学:伦理
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
4.50%
发文量
48
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Developing World Bioethics provides long needed case studies, teaching materials, news in brief, and legal backgrounds to bioethics scholars and students in developing and developed countries alike. This companion journal to Bioethics also features high-quality peer reviewed original articles. It is edited by well-known bioethicists who are working in developing countries, yet it will also be open to contributions and commentary from developed countries'' authors. Developing World Bioethics is the only journal in the field dedicated exclusively to developing countries'' bioethics issues. The journal is an essential resource for all those concerned about bioethical issues in the developing world. Members of Ethics Committees in developing countries will highly value a special section dedicated to their work.
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