Abstract

BackgroundAs Canadian global health researchers who conducted a qualitative study with adults with and without disabilities in Uganda, we obtained ethics approval from four institutional research ethics boards (two in Canada and two in Uganda). In Canada, research ethics boards and researchers follow the research ethics norms of the Tri-Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans (TCPS2), and the National Guidelines for Research Involving Humans as Research Participants of Uganda (NGRU) in Uganda. The preparation and implementation of this qualitative research raised specific ethical issues related to research participant privacy and the importance of availability and management of financial resources.Main bodyOur field experience highlights three main issues for reflection. First, we demonstrate that, in a global health research context, methodological and logistic adjustments were necessary throughout the research implementation process to ensure the protection of study participants’ privacy, especially that of people with disabilities, despite having followed the prescribed Canadian and Ugandan ethics norms. Data collection and management plans were adapted iteratively based on local realities. Second, securing financial support as a key aspect of financial management was critical to ensure privacy through disability-sensitive data collection strategies. Without adequate funding, the recruitment of research participants based on disability type, sex, and region or the hiring of local sign language interpreters would not have been possible. Third, although the TCPS2 and NGRU underscore the significance of participants’ privacy, none of these normative documents clearly express this issue in the context of global health research and disability, nor broadly discuss the ethical issue related to financial availability and management.ConclusionsConducting research in resource limited settings and with study participants with different needs calls for a nuanced and respectful implementation of research ethics in a global health context. We recommend a greater integration in both the TCPS2 and NGRU of global health research, disability, and responsible conduct of research. This integration should also be accompanied by adequate training which can further guide researchers, be they senior, junior, or students, and funding agencies.

Highlights

  • Management of participant privacy Prior to leaving for Uganda, we received ethics approval from Research Ethics Board (REB)

  • We recommend a greater integration in both the Tri-Council Policy Statement (TCPS2) and NGRU of global health research, disability, and responsible conduct of research

  • The qualitative research, reported in detail elsewhere [6, 7], was part of a broader mixed methods project which examined the relationships among legislation, health policy and the utilisation of sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services by people with disabilities in Uganda

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Summary

D E B AT E

How to navigate the application of ethics norms in global health research: reflections based on qualitative research conducted with people with disabilities in Uganda. Muriel Mac‐Seing1,2* , Louise Ringuette, Kate Zinszer, Béatrice Godard and Christina Zarowsky

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