Should the Decisions of Institutional Review Boards Be Consistent?

In response to increasing concerns regarding inconsistency in the decision-making of institutional review boards (IRBs), we introduce the decision-maker's dilemma, which arises when complex, normative decisions must be made regularly. Those faced with such decisions can either develop a process...

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Published in:Ethics and Human Research
Main Author: Friesen P.; Yusof A.N.M.; Sheehan M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2019
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85070503666&doi=10.1002%2feahr.500022&partnerID=40&md5=813f5aaa0ac8fb9a69a242ca5f7c8849
id 2-s2.0-85070503666
spelling 2-s2.0-85070503666
Friesen P.; Yusof A.N.M.; Sheehan M.
Should the Decisions of Institutional Review Boards Be Consistent?
2019
Ethics and Human Research
41
4
10.1002/eahr.500022
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85070503666&doi=10.1002%2feahr.500022&partnerID=40&md5=813f5aaa0ac8fb9a69a242ca5f7c8849
In response to increasing concerns regarding inconsistency in the decision-making of institutional review boards (IRBs), we introduce the decision-maker's dilemma, which arises when complex, normative decisions must be made regularly. Those faced with such decisions can either develop a process of algorithmic decision-making, in which consistency is ensured but many morally relevant factors are excluded from the process, or embrace discretionary decision-making, which makes space for morally relevant factors to shape decisions but leads to decisions that are inconsistent. Based on an exploration of similarities between systems of criminal sentencing and of research ethics review, we argue for a discretionary system of decision-making, even though it leads to more inconsistency than does an algorithmic system. We conclude with a discussion of some safeguards that could improve consistency while still making space for discretion to enter IRBs’ decision-making processes. © 2019 by The Hastings Center. All rights reserved
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
25782363
English
Article

author Friesen P.; Yusof A.N.M.; Sheehan M.
spellingShingle Friesen P.; Yusof A.N.M.; Sheehan M.
Should the Decisions of Institutional Review Boards Be Consistent?
author_facet Friesen P.; Yusof A.N.M.; Sheehan M.
author_sort Friesen P.; Yusof A.N.M.; Sheehan M.
title Should the Decisions of Institutional Review Boards Be Consistent?
title_short Should the Decisions of Institutional Review Boards Be Consistent?
title_full Should the Decisions of Institutional Review Boards Be Consistent?
title_fullStr Should the Decisions of Institutional Review Boards Be Consistent?
title_full_unstemmed Should the Decisions of Institutional Review Boards Be Consistent?
title_sort Should the Decisions of Institutional Review Boards Be Consistent?
publishDate 2019
container_title Ethics and Human Research
container_volume 41
container_issue 4
doi_str_mv 10.1002/eahr.500022
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85070503666&doi=10.1002%2feahr.500022&partnerID=40&md5=813f5aaa0ac8fb9a69a242ca5f7c8849
description In response to increasing concerns regarding inconsistency in the decision-making of institutional review boards (IRBs), we introduce the decision-maker's dilemma, which arises when complex, normative decisions must be made regularly. Those faced with such decisions can either develop a process of algorithmic decision-making, in which consistency is ensured but many morally relevant factors are excluded from the process, or embrace discretionary decision-making, which makes space for morally relevant factors to shape decisions but leads to decisions that are inconsistent. Based on an exploration of similarities between systems of criminal sentencing and of research ethics review, we argue for a discretionary system of decision-making, even though it leads to more inconsistency than does an algorithmic system. We conclude with a discussion of some safeguards that could improve consistency while still making space for discretion to enter IRBs’ decision-making processes. © 2019 by The Hastings Center. All rights reserved
publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd
issn 25782363
language English
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