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These are just the beginnings of a list of Research terms and definitions. The list will slowly be expanded as time goes on.
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
AAALAC: Association for Assessment and Accreditation of
Laboratory Animal Care, International AAHRPP: The Association for the Accreditation of Human Research Protection Programs The organization that the Department of Veterans Affairs has contracted with to provide its accreditation program for all VAMC human research protection programs. The purpose of the program is to strengthen the protections afforded to human subjects participating in research at a VAMC through an ongoing independent, external review. The program has been in place since 2/26/2002. Website: www.aahrpp.org
AAMC: Association of American Medical Colleges
Adverse Event (AE): Any reaction or undesirable event that occurs in conjunction with the use of a drug, biologic product, diagnostic agent, medical device, experimental procedure, or even accepted medical treatment (if part of a research protocol), whether or not the event is considered related to the drug treatment or procedures. Such events may be psychological, emotional, social and/or physical and include any illness, sign, symptom, or clinically significant laboratory test abnormality that has appeared or worsened during the course of the experimental study regardless of causal relationship to the drugs and procedures under study.
ARENA: Applied Research Ethics National Association Assent:
A child's affirmative agreement to participate in research. Mere failure to
object should not, absent affirmative agreement, be construed as
assent.
CFR: Code of Federal Regulations
Children: Persons who have not attained the legal age for consent to treatments or procedures involved in the research, under the applicable law of the jurisdiction in which the research will be conducted. Coercion: Coercion occurs when an overt or implicit threat of harm is intentionally presented by one person to another in order to obtain compliance. For example, an investigator might tell a prospective subject that he or she will lose access to needed health services if he or she does not participate in the research. This would be considered coercion. Common Rule: The common federal policy for protecting human subjects, promulgated in regulation and contained in the CFR, that outlines the provisions regarding the review and approval of research, is generally referred to as the “Common Rule”. It was signed by 17 federal agencies, including the VA, which are thus bound by it.The “Common Rule” for VA is in 38 CFR 16. Comparable regulations for DHHS are 45 CFR 46 Subpart A & for FDA are 21 CR 50 and 56. Compassionate use: the provision of investigational drugs outside of an ongoing clinical trial to a limited number of patients who are desperately ill and for whom no standard alternative therapies are available. Confidentiality: a condition in which information is shared or released in a controlled manner so that information is not made available or disclosed to unauthorized individuals, entities or processes. Conflict of Interest: Any situation in which financial or personal obligations may compromise or present the appearance of compromising an individual’s or group’s professional judgment in conducting, reviewing, or reporting research. Conflicts of interest may arise because of the intellectual property involved in many research discoveries or industry-academic partnerships, from financial incentives pharmaceutical or biotech companies may offer researchers or physicians for conducting trials or enrolling subjects, or due to particular role relationships. Continuing Review: The IRB is required to review all non-exempt research projects at intervals appropriate to the degree of risk, but not less than once a year. Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB): A group of experts that advise study sponsors and investigators. The members of the DSMB serve in an individual capacity and provide their expertise and recommendations. Disability: The substantial disruption of a person’s ability to conduct normal life functions. Emergency use: A life-threatening situation in which no standard acceptable treatment is available and in which there is not sufficient time to obtain IRB approval.
Ethics:
There are three major ethical codes
that provide general ethical guidelines for the responsible conduct of
research in the United States and which provide the basis for the HHS/FDA
regulations on the protection of human research participants. Most
institutions use the Belmont Report, Declaration of Helsinki and the
Nuremberg Code.
Exempt: The project is exempt from all Federal Regulations but since it is still human subject research it must be submitted to ORI for a determination that the research is exempt and approval. Expedited Review: This means the project must receive review by the IRB chair or an experienced voting member or group of experienced voting members designated by the IRB chair rather than the entire IRB. Expired Protocols: If the IRB has not re-approved a research study by the study's current expiration date, the research is no longer approved. While all research activities must stop, including recruitment, enrollment, interventions, interactions, and data analysis. If an investigator believes that currently enrolled participants will be harmed by stopping interventions, the investigator must provide a list of such subjects and the reasons why participation in the research should continue. The IRB chair, and in the case of VA research the IRB chair in consultation with the VA Medical Director, will determine which participants may continue because of an over-riding safety concern or ethical issue involved such that it was in the best interests of the individual participant to continue participating in the research interventions or interactions. Under no circumstances will investigators be allowed to enroll new participants into expired research. The expiration will be lifted when and if the protocol is re-approved by the IRB.
FDA:
Food and Drug Administration
Participant is defined as:
Website: www.fda.gov
FWA:
Federal Wide Assurance Guardian: An individual who is authorized under applicable State or local law to consent on behalf of a child to general medical care.
HRPP: Human Research Protection Program HUD: Humanitarian Use Device A HUD is a device that is intended to benefit patients by treating or diagnosing a disease or condition that affects or is manifested in fewer than 4,000 individuals in the United States per year. Human subject: Living individual(s) about whom an investigator conducting research obtains: (1) data through intervention or interaction with the individual; or (2) identifiable private information [Federal Policy 46 CFR §46.102(f)]. Under FDA regulations a human subject is defined as [FDA regulations 21 CFR §50.3(g), 21 CFR §56.102(e), 21 CFR §812.3(p):
Intervention includes both physical procedures by which data are gathered (for example, venipuncture) and manipulations of the subject or the subject's environment that are performed for research purposes. Interaction includes communication or interpersonal contact between investigator and subject. Private information includes information about behavior that occurs in a context in which an individual can reasonably expect that no observation or recording is taking place, and information which has been provided for specific purposes by an individual and which the individual can reasonably expect will not be made public (for example, a medical record). Private information must be individually identifiable (i.e., the identity of the subject is or may readily be ascertained by the investigator or associated with the information) in order for obtaining the information to constitute research involving human subjects.
IACUC: Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee
IDE:
Investigational Device Exemption Identifiable: The identity of the individual is or may readily be ascertained by the investigator or associated with the information.
IND: Investigational New Drug Application Informed consent: Prospective subjects must be given sufficient information about the research and its risks and benefits to reach an informed decision as to whether they will voluntarily participate. Investigators must obtain the informed consent of prospective subjects before they can be included in research, unless waived by the IRB. IRB approval: the determination of the IRB that the research has been reviewed and may be conducted at an institution within the constraints set forth by institutional and federal requirements. An IRB shall have the authority to suspend research that is not being conducted in accordance with the IRB's requirements.
IRB: Institutional Review Board The IRB has the authority to
The institution or institutional officials cannot approve research that has not been approved by the IRB. In the VA system, the IRB is the Human Subjects Subcommittee of the Research & Development Committee. (Note: The R&D cannot approve research that has not been approved by the IRB. A protocol must have approval from both the IRB and the R&D to be performed at a VA facility.) [38 CFR 16, 21 CFR 56; 45
CFR 46; VA Manual 3, Part 1, Chapter 9]
Legally Authorized Representative: Legally authorized representative means an individual or judicial or other body authorized under applicable law to consent on behalf of a prospective subject to the subject's participation in the procedure(s) involved in the research. This definition is the same for DHHS and FDA.
Life-threatening adverse experience: An adverse experience that places the patient or subject at immediate risk of death from the reaction as it occurred.
MAP: Multi Assessment Program*
[Note: There is also a
MAP Self-Assessment instrument.] Minimal risk: The probability and magnitude of harm or discomfort in the research are not greater in and of themselves than those encountered in daily life or during the performance of routine physical or psychological examinations or tests. In the case of research involving prisoners as participants, minimal risk is the probability and magnitude of physical or psychological harm that is normally encountered in the daily lives, or in the routine medical, dental, or psychological examination of healthy persons. Misconduct: A serious deviation from accepted practice in carrying out research, or in reporting the results of research; or material failure to comply with Federal requirements affecting specific aspects of the conduct of research (e.g., the protection of human subjects and the welfare of laboratory animals).
NCQA: National Committee for Quality Assurance
NIH: National Institutes of Health
OHRP: Office of
Human Research Protection Oral History: The Oral History Association defines oral history as “a method of gathering and preserving historical information through recorded interviews with participants in past events and ways of life.”
Website: www.alpha.dickinson.edu/oha
ORO: Office of Research Oversight
Serves as the primary VHA office in advising the
Under Secretary for Health on all matters of compliance and assurance
regarding human subjects protections, animal welfare, research safety, and
research misconduct.
Orphan Drug: An orphan drug is one for a disease which affects less than 200,000 Americans, or less than 5 per 10,000 people in a community.
Parent: A child's biological or adoptive parent. Permission: The agreement of parent(s) or guardian to the participation of their child or ward in research. Phase I, II, III, and IV Drug Trials:
Privacy: Having control over the extent, timing, and circumstances of sharing oneself (physically, behaviorally, or intellectually) with others. Protocol: The formal design or plan of an experiment or research activity; specifically, the plan submitted to an IRB for review and to an agency for research support. The protocol includes a description of the research design or methodology to be employed, the eligibility requirements for prospective subjects and controls, the treatment regimen(s), and the proposed methods of analysis that will be performed on the collected data. Physician: is defined, in this document, as anyone with a doctorate-level health science degree (M.D., D.O., O.D., DMD, DPM, PhD., etc.).
PRIM&R: Public Responsibility in Medicine and Research Principal Investigator: The scientist or scholar with responsibility for the design and conduct of a research project. Prisoner: An individual involuntarily confined or detained in a penal institution. Private information: Information about behavior that occurs in a context which an individual can reasonably expect that no observation or recording is taking place, and information which has been provided for specific purposes by an individual and which the individual can reasonably expect will not be made public (for example, a medical record). Research: A systematic investigation, including research development, testing, and evaluation, designed to develop or contribute to generalized knowledge, or a clinical investigation. Under FDA regulations research is defined as any experiment that involves a test article and one or more human subjects, and that either must meet the requirements for prior submission to the Food and Drug Administration.
Research misconduct: is defined as fabrication,
falsification, or plagiarism in proposing, performing, or reviewing
research, or in reporting research results. Research Participant: A living individual about whom an investigator conducting a systematic investigation, designed to develop or contribute to generalized knowledge obtains data through intervention or interaction with the individual, or identifiable private information.
Risk: The possibility of suffering harm or loss. A risk may be known or unknown. Serious Adverse Event: Defined as events that are fatal, life-threatening, permanently disabling, or require inpatient hospitalization or prolong an ongoing hospitalization. Congenital anomalies/birth defects in the offspring of a subject, cancers, or overdoses are also considered serious events.
SOP: Standard Operating Procedures Subjects (Human): See: Human Subjects. Suspended Protocols: Suspension of IRB approval: An action taken by the IRB to temporarily or permanently withdraw approval for some or all research activities short of permanently withdrawing approval for all research activities. Terminated Protocols: Termination of IRB approval: An action taken by the IRB to permanently withdraw approval for all research activities. Undue Influence: Undue influence often occurs through an offer of an excessive or inappropriate reward or other overture in order to obtain compliance. For example, an investigator might promise psychology students extra credit if they participate in the research. If that is the only way a student can earn extra credit, then the investigator is unduly influencing potential subjects. If, however, the investigator offers comparable non-research alternatives for earning extra credit, the possibility of undue influence is minimized. Viable fetus: The fetus, after delivery, is able to survive to the point of independently maintaining heartbeat and respiration, given the benefit of available medical therapy. If the fetus is viable, it is a child and may be involved in research to the extent permissible. Voluntarism: Is the expression of authentic choice in the absence of coercion.
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