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Paper Title

Moral conflict and competing duties in the initiation of a biomedical HIV prevention trial with minor adolescents

Keywords

  • adolescents
  • hiv
  • moral conflict
  • clinical trial
  • pre-exposure prophylaxis (prep)
  • parental consent
  • biomedical research
  • ethical dilemmas
  • principal investigators
  • study personnel
  • informed consent
  • institutional review board (irb)
  • research ethics
  • minor autonomy
  • protective duties
  • scientific duties
  • vulnerable populations
  • consent procedures
  • human subjects research
  • regulatory compliance
  • ethical challenges
  • medical ethics
  • adolescent health
  • hiv prevention
  • public health policy
  • bioethics
  • research governance
  • risk-benefit analysis
  • clinical research ethics 4o

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 8 | Issue : 3 | Page No : 145–152

Published On

November, 2016

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Abstract

Background: Biomedical HIV prevention research with minors is complicated by the requirement of parental consent, which may disclose sensitive information to parents. We examine the experience of principal investigators (PIs) and study personnel who faced this complex ethical issue in the first biomedical HIV prevention study that allowed minors to self-consent for enrollment. Methods: We conducted in-depth interviews with PIs and study personnel from 13 medical trial sites in cities across the United States. Data were analyzed using a conventional content analysis. Results: Participants experienced moral conflict as they struggled to fulfill conflicting duties in this trial involving minor adolescents with multiple vulnerabilities. Our participants experienced conflict between the two types of duties—protective and scientific—previously identified by Merritt. Protective duties were owed to the child, the parents, and the institution, and participants expressed tension between the actions that would protect these subgroups and the actions necessary to fulfill their scientific duties. Conclusions: Moral conflict was resolved in a variety of ways, including reflecting on the protocol's alignment with federal regulations, modifying consent language, considering each individual for enrollment carefully, and accepting institutional review board (IRB) decisions. Potential solutions for future studies are discussed, and include flexible protocol consent procedures and centralized IRB reviews.

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