Abstract

Internet-connected devices are changing the way people live, work, and relate to one another. For prevention scientists, technological advances create opportunities to promote the welfare of human subjects and society. The challenge is to obtain the benefits while minimizing risks. In this article, we use the guiding principles for ethical human subjects research and proposed changes to the Common Rule regulations, as a basis for discussing selected opportunities and challenges that new technologies present for prevention science. The benefits of conducting research with new populations, and at new levels of integration into participants’ daily lives, are presented along with five challenges along with technological and other solutions to strengthen the protections that we provide: (1) achieving adequate informed consent with procedures that are acceptable to participants in a digital age; (2) balancing opportunities for rapid development and broad reach, with gaining adequate understanding of population needs; (3) integrating data collection and intervention into participants’ lives while minimizing intrusiveness and fatigue; (4) setting appropriate expectations for responding to safety and suicide concerns; and (5) safeguarding newly available streams of sensitive data. Our goal is to promote collaboration between prevention scientists, institutional review boards, and community members to safely and ethically harness advancing technologies to strengthen impact of prevention science.

Highlights

  • Internet-connected devices are changing the way people live, work, and relate to one another

  • Technological advances create new opportunities to promote the welfare of human subjects

  • We begin by briefly reviewing key guiding principles pertaining to prevention research with human subjects and proposed changes to the rules that govern such research in the United States

Read more

Summary

Salient Human Subjects Challenges in Prevention Science

Mood Gym (Christensen et al 2004) teaches cognitive behavioral skills to prevent depression, providing opportunities to identify and recruit at-risk individuals amenable to online interventions Crisis text services, such as Crisis Text Line (Crisis Text Line 2015) and the Veterans Crisis Line (US Department of Veterans Affairs 2014), attract new populations of at-risk individuals and generate vast quantities of data researchers that can use to understand the needs of individuals in crisis and discover new ways to help them in the short and long term. Monitoring and intervening with high-risk individuals were not feasible In this case, researchers provided information about accessing mental health resources to all participants within the online survey. While the tensions are not fundamentally new, finding solutions in a new context is a critical

Considerations for human subjects protocols
Setting appropriate expectations for responding to safety and suicide concerns
Safeguarding newly available streams of data
Findings
Compliance with Ethical Standards
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call