Although there is clearly a need for
evidenced-based behavioral or biomedical prevention or treatment programs for
suicide, substance abuse, and sexual health targeted to members of the LGBT
population under the age of eighteen, few such programs exist, due in
substantial part to limited research knowledge. Ambiguities in regulations that
govern human subjects protections and the related inconsistencies in institutional
review board (IRB) interpretations of regulatory language are the key reason
for the lack of rigorous clinical trial evidence to support treatment choices
and prevention approaches to reducing health disparities for this population.
Given the socially sensitive nature of suicide, substance abuse, and HIV and
STI research in general and LGBT research specifically, in the absence of
empirical data to guide their decisions, IRBs must often rely on subjective
judgments of minimal risk, which can lead to overestimation of the magnitude
and probability of psychological, social, and informational harms that might
arise from LGBT youth participation in clinical trials. In addition, more than
other youth, LGBT adolescents whose families are unaware of their sexual
orientation or gender identity or whose families have victimized them on
account of it may be reluctant to participate in studies that require guardian
permission. This, in turn, intensifies problems of recruitment and unbiased
sampling. However, many IRBs are reluctant to apply federal regulations
permitting waiver of guardian permission under conditions in which such
permission is clearly not "feasible" or "reasonable" to
require.
Consequently, many investigators have excluded LGBT individuals under
eighteen years of age in health intervention research proposals because of
anticipated or actual difficulties obtaining IRB approval. This situation is in
conflict with current ethical discourse focusing on the right of youths to
participate in trials that will protect them from receiving developmentally
untested, inappropriate, and unsafe treatments. In this article, we describe
these barriers and recommendations for providing LGBT youth safe and fair
access to health research.
Full article
at: http://goo.gl/98LjYM
By: Fisher CB, Mustanski B.
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
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