Research ethics: are we minimizing harm or maximizing bureaucracy?

A phenomenon called “ethics creep” is discouraging researchers rather than protecting study participants.

October 08, 2018
Mind control measurement

Researchers working with human subjects in North America and beyond are very familiar with ethics protocols required by institutions of higher education, protocols rightly put in place to minimize harm to research participants.

In Canada, individual higher education institutions have ethical jurisdiction over the research conducted within their walls and by their employees, although these operations are guided by the Tri-Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans (TCPS). First published in 1998 by the three main federal research funding agencies, the TCPS requires that all university research involving human subjects be approved by a research ethics board (REB) and outlines the principles to be upheld in assessing the ethical merits of an application, though no standardized process of application or evaluation is given. It is understandable that universities, following the TCPS, want to put steps in place to minimize the harm researchers may cause to potential participants.

In recent years, however, the Canadian ethics process seems to have become more of an exercise in bureaucracy than a reasonable examination of the harm posed by research, and we fear this process will prevent actual research from occurring. We have several experiences dealing with research ethics boards at various postsecondary institutions to give us hours of anecdotes to pore over. Our most recent journey was sparked by a successful research grant wherein we proposed to study students who had transferred from the Ontario university system to the Ontario colleges system. We intended to conduct qualitative interviews with 15 to 20 people who had made this transition and we were well aware that our university and the funding agency would require ethics clearance before releasing the funds.

We completed the ethics protocol at our home institution, which was a dense form of 13 pages, covering everything from researcher contact information to data destruction plans. It is worth noting that our project was very straightforward, allowing us to skip certain sections of the application; it did not involve Aboriginal, Inuit or Métis communities, minors, alternative authorized consent, or people in vulnerable circumstances, and did not touch on particularly sensitive topics or illegal activity. Our methodology did not include deception, secondary use of identifiable data (such as health records), or creation of or modification to a database.

Nevertheless, our completed application was 26 pages, including an appendix comprised of all supporting documentation. The research ethics review committee did not have any fundamental objections to our project, but still responded with a dozen suggestions and minor concerns. After addressing each of the points raised and resubmitting the application, the project was finally approved and we could move on with our data collection. Or so we thought.

Our next step was recruitment. We began by advertising the study with friends and colleagues by word of mouth and social media, all perfectly acceptable methods under our ethics clearance. We also contacted various colleges nearby our university and in Toronto, provided our ethics clearance certificate, and asked if they could advertise our study. This is where things got interesting. While one college was happy to advertise our study immediately with recruitment posters, every other college (a total of eight were contacted) indicated that we would have to fill out their institutional ethics protocol. In other words, if we recruited students from their institution by way of social media, it was perfectly within our ethics protocol, but if they assisted us in recruitment by advertising our study on their campuses in any way (i.e. putting up a poster, sending out an email), they required another full ethics application and their own review.

We were discouraged by this setback given how labour-intensive the ethics application was to put together and the time it took to get it approved, but we found the Multi-College Ethics Research Board to which all of the proposed colleges were members. In theory, a single application would give us approval from multiple colleges at once. Except it did not. Once this application was filled in and approved (after making more minor changes and resubmitting it), we were issued with a recommendation letter. We then had to send another full application to each college individually, along with the multi-college recommendation letter, our own institutional ethics certificate, and all the supporting documents.

Each college would decide if we met the criteria for accessing students. In four cases, this was enough to get clearance, but one college required further minor changes and resubmission of the application, while two more would not even consider our ethics application unless both the principal investigator and co-investigator – an associate professor (and Ontario Research Chair holder) and a postdoctoral fellow, respectively – completed an online tutorial on research ethics and sent certificates verifying completion.

In the end, it took over five months and nine application submissions (12 if you count the resubmissions to incorporate REB feedback) to complete the ethics process and have our recruitment materials displayed at all of the participating colleges. Five months of ethics review in order to do interviews with 15 to 20 adults on an uncontroversial subject.

Canadian sociologist Kevin Haggerty called much of what we have just described as “ethics creep,” whereby “the regulatory structure of the ethics bureaucracy is expanding outward, colonizing new groups, practices, and institutions, while at the same time intensifying the regulation of practices deemed to fall within its official ambit.” Dr. Haggerty made this observation nearly 15 years ago, and we argue that in the intervening years ethics creep has become an ethics sprawl.

Adding to this frustration is the knowledge that research outside of academia has not experienced this kind of ethics sprawl. As education researchers, we work closely with school districts that collect data on students often, some even administering surveys to their students. However, as soon as third-party researchers want to collect data on the same students, an ethics protocol is required – certainly by the higher education institution to which they were affiliated and quite possibly by the school district.

We are obviously not arguing against the existence of ethics protocols or REBs, but we believe that ethics sprawl is discouraging researchers rather than protecting participants. The fetishization of rules and bureaucratic process in ethics review and a blanket worst-case scenario approach is a drain on researchers’ time and resources in return for – what? Do we have any evidence that this level of procedural minutiae is providing improved protection of research participants or preventing unethical research? We might want to consider taking a page from our colleagues south of the border: the National Science Foundation has, as of 2017, abolished the need for institutional research board ethical approval on all projects deemed “low risk.”

Karen Robson is an associate professor of sociology and holder of the Ontario Research Chair in Educational Achievement and At-Risk Youth at McMaster University; Reana Maier is a postdoctoral research fellow in sociology, also at McMaster. She received her doctorate in education from the University of Cambridge.

This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.