源语言 | 英语 |
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主期刊名 | International Library of Ethics, Law and Technology |
出版商 | Springer Science and Business Media B.V. |
页 | 133-163 |
页数 | 31 |
DOI | |
出版状态 | 已出版 - 2016 |
出版系列
姓名 | International Library of Ethics, Law and Technology |
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卷 | 16 |
ISSN(印刷版) | 1875-0044 |
ISSN(电子版) | 1875-0036 |
!!!ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- 生物医学工程
- 信息系统
- 公共行政
- 安全研究
指纹
探究 'The Tunnel at the End of the Light? Development of the Tri Council Policy Statement in Canada' 的科研主题。它们共同构成独一无二的指纹。引用此
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International Library of Ethics, Law and Technology. Springer Science and Business Media B.V., 2016. 页码 133-163 (International Library of Ethics, Law and Technology; 卷 16).
科研成果: 图书/报告稿件的类型 › 章节
}
TY - CHAP
T1 - The Tunnel at the End of the Light? Development of the Tri Council Policy Statement in Canada
AU - Downie, Jocelyn
AU - Onyemelukwe, Cheluchi
N1 - Funding Information: funded by the agencies. It thus applies, indirectly, to research which is funded by other sources, including by private or commercial organisations. The certification process requires the entering into a formal “Memorandum of Understanding” with any of the three funding agencies or all, as the case may be, which requires the institution to comply with the TCPS. 13 In addition, sanctions may be imposed on institutions and researchers who fail to comply with the requirements of the TCPS. 14 Moreover, other funding bodies, including provincial or federal funding bodies, require compliance with the TCPS. These include several Canadian federal government organizations such as the National Research Council Canada (NRC), the Canadian Space Agency, Health Canada and National Defence, provincial funding bodies such as the Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation and the Manitoba Health Research Council. 15 Funding Information: 320). The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) had developed no research ethics guidelines, although it had the largest research budget of the three agencies (McDonald 2000, 82; Feminist Health Care Ethics Research Network 1998, 257, note 2). However, research funded by the NSERC was subject to the SSHRC or MRC guidelines, depending on which was most appropriate. 4 Funding Information: The significance of research ethics in Canada was recognized by the three major funding agencies – the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, the Medical Research Council, and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council–when they began a process of developing research ethics guidelines in 1994. That process culminated in the Tri-Council Policy Statement on Ethics in Human Research (TCPS) in 1998. The TCPS has since become the foremost policy guideline for the governance of research involving humans in Canada. The establishment of the TCPS was thus an historic step in Canada’s research ethics landscape, and thus deserves attention. As McDonald points out in the first treatment of this subject (McDonald 2009), it is important to have a sound historical understanding of Canada’s research ethics history, not only for purposes of academic interest, but also to inform future policymaking. McDonald brings an insider’s perspective to the process of creating the TCPS, having served as Deputy Chair of the Tri-Council Working Group—the group that drafted the document which evolved into the TCPS—from 1996 to 1998. In his paper, McDonald calls for more objective discussion and reflection on the process of bringing into being the TCPS (McDonald 2009, at 21). Funding Information: The historical and practical importance of the TCPS is further emphasized by the transformation of the Medical Research Council and the National Health Research Development Program (NHRDP) into the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). This followed the 1998 work of the National Task Force, comprising leaders in Canadian health research, which found that the health research system was highly fragmented and that a more organized forum for promoting health research was required. It recommended that the government increase funding for health research, and create a modern organization consisting of networks which would fashion an integrated health agenda, bring together all fields of health research and encourage collaborations between these areas and multidisciplinary research (Prescott 1999). The CIHR was created in 2000 by an Act of Parliament (Canadian Institutes of Health Research Act 2000, c. 6), following the federal government’s promise earlier in the 1999 federal budget (Health Canada 1999; Finance Canada 1999; Public Health Agency of Canada Health 1999). One of the main motivations for the creation of the CIHR, then, was to bring together different disciplines which deal with health research. It is also one of its mandates under the CIHR Act. 10 The efforts to enact the TCPS, with its focus on all types of research involving humans, seem therefore prescient. The increase in government funding of health research that has come with the creation of the CIHR also increases the need to ensure high ethical standards for such research. The TCPS provides a policy for the research funded by the CIHR. Funding Information: With these guidelines in place, why was there a further move to implement a common ethics policy for research involving humans for the three Councils? Several controversies relating to research involving humans in the immediately preceding years appear to have been contributory. A 1992 incident, where a Concordia University professor murdered four of his colleagues after his complaints to his university of improper scientific conduct in research funded by the NSERC went unheeded, resulted in the Tri-Council Policy Statement on Integrity in Research and Scholarship in 1994 (MRC, NSERC, SSHRC DATE; Adair 2001, 28). 5 This policy required universities to develop procedures to deal with complaints of scientific misconduct (Adair 2001, 28, note 12). This policy paved the way for the three Councils to begin the process of developing a policy for research ethics (Adair 2001, 30). Other incidents of ethical misconduct which took place during this period, including falsifications of patients’ records in a breast cancer study by Roger Poisson, a breast cancer researcher at St. Luc Hospital in Montreal, and other researchers’ use of fraudulent data in several publications, may also have influenced the three Councils to seek a common solution with regards to ensuring high research ethics standards in Canada (Adair 2001, 29; Kinsella 2010; Altman 1994; Angell 1994). A 1994 report by the Royal Commission on New Reproductive Technologies, which recommended legislation to govern certain scientific activities, could also have motivated the decision by the three Councils to put in place a policy, in an attempt to preempt possible legislation on aspects of research involving humans (Kondro 1998 , 1521). Publisher Copyright: © 2016, Springer International Publishing Switzerland.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85078564621&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85078564621&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-319-32240-7_8
DO - 10.1007/978-3-319-32240-7_8
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85078564621
T3 - International Library of Ethics, Law and Technology
SP - 133
EP - 163
BT - International Library of Ethics, Law and Technology
PB - Springer Science and Business Media B.V.
ER -