Abstract

As number of students and faculty in schools of social work conducting research continues to increase, especially research funded by National Institutes of Health (NIH) and National Science Foundation (NSF), they have also had to pay greater attention to subject of responsible conduct of research and (RCRS). NIH and NSF mandate that undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral students, and postdoctoral fellows, receive training on RCRS. In this editorial, we provide a brief summary of history and nature of RCRS followed by examples of two differing RCRS training programs including a discussion of corresponding benefits and challenges. We conclude with recommendations for social work research and questions social work educators and researchers need to consider concerning RCRS education. RCRS refers to the practice of scientific and scholarly investigation with integrity. It involves awareness and application of established professional norms and ethical principles in performance of all activities related to scientific research and to scholarship (see http://www.scholarlyintegrity.umich.edu/guidelines/). Attention to subject of research integrity became a public issue in United States in 1981, when first congressional hearing was held on subject propelled by a series of allegations of misconduct (see http://ori.dhhs.gov/about/history.shtml. In fact, all aspects of research misconduct concerning NIH-funded research fall under authority of Department of Health and Human Services Office of Research Integrity (see http://ori.dhhs.gov/). As a result of this increased attention to research integrity, legislation has been passed to improve procedures by which applicants, institutions, and federal agencies prevent and address research misconduct. One of significant changes occurring since 1989 when NIH submitted first notice of policy related to instruction on research integrity (see http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/historical/ 1989_12_22_Vol_18_No_45.pdf) is that all trainees, fellows, participants, and scholars receiving any NIH support for training receive instruction in RCRS. Specifically, as stated in NIH's NOT-OD-10-019: NIH requires that all trainees, fellows, participants, and scholars receiving support through any NIH training, career development award (individual or institutional), research education grant, and dissertation research grant must receive instruction in responsible conduct of research. This policy will take effect with all new and renewal applications submitted on or after January 25, 2010, and for all continuation (Type 5) applications with deadlines on or after January 1, 2011. This Notice applies to following programs: D43, D71, F05, F30, F31, F32, F33, F34, F37, F38, K01, K02, K05, K07, K08, KU12, K18, K22, K23, K24, K25, K26, K30, K99/R00, KL1 KL2, R25, R36, T15, T32, T34, T35, T36, T37, T90/R90, TL1, TU2, and U2R. This policy also applies to any other NIH-funded programs supporting research training, career development, or research education that require instruction in responsible conduct of research as stated in relevant funding opportunity announcements (see http://grants1.nih.gov/grants/ guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-10-019.html) Core RCRS topics include following: * Data Acquisition, Management, Sharing, and Ownership * Conflict of Interest and Commitment * Protection of Human Beings Subjects * Research Misconduct, including Data Fabrication and Falsification * Personal, Professional, and Financial Conflicts of Interest and Commitment * Publication Practices and Responsible Authorship * Supervisory and Mentoring Relationships and Responsibilities * Responsibilities of Collaborative Research * Welfare of Laboratory Animals When Research Involves Human Participants and Animal Subjects It is important to comment here that preceding outline of topics clearly indicates that RCRS training encompasses a much broader and richer set of topics on RCRS than traditional training involving human subjects protection issues that researchers are quite familiar with. …

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