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Human Subjects Training Tutorial
Search UW-Stout University of Wisconsin - Stout
What is research? What is a systematic investigation? What is generalizable knowledge? Research examples What is a human subject? What is human subjects research? Collaborations Additional information UW-Stout IRB
Module 1 Examples
: Ethical, historical, and legal background
Part 1: Ethics Part 2: History Part 3: Legal Requirements
Module 3: Basic Principles
Part 1: The Belmont Report
Part 2: Private information and information security
Module 3 Examples
Module 4: Approval Process
Part 1: Roles and Responsibilities of an Institutional Review Board Part 2: Submitting a protocol
Part 3: Informed consent Written consent, oral consent, and waivers Part 4: Continuing review Module 4 Examples Module 4 Quiz
Part 1: Ethics The opportunity to conduct research using human subjects is a professional privilege. With that privilege comes responsibilities. The most basic of these responsibilities is to recognize that research has the potential to harm its subjects, directly or indirectly, and to strive to minimize that potential. Harm may be social, psychological, financial, or physical. In addition to the research subject, individuals discussed in a study, investigators, society, and UW-Stout as an institution, may be subject to harm. Research can never be free from risk, but, as professionals, investigators and other key personnel involved in a study must be aware of risks and work to minimize them.
UW-Stout's policies and procedures for working with human subjects are guided by the ethical principles set forth in The Belmont Report. Following Congressional directive, the National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research outlined basic ethical principals for guiding research with human subjects in 1979. These principles will be discussed at length in Module 3.
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