Qualitative Health Research and Procedural Ethics: An Interview Study to Investigate Researchers' Ways of Navigating the Demands of Medical Research Ethics Committees in Germany

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Title: Qualitative Health Research and Procedural Ethics: An Interview Study to Investigate Researchers' Ways of Navigating the Demands of Medical Research Ethics Committees in Germany
Language: English
Authors: Sarah Potthoff (ORCID 0000-0003-0434-8218), Fee Roth, Matthé Scholten (ORCID 0000-0001-8000-8974)
Source: Research Ethics. 2024 20(2):388-410.
Availability: SAGE Publications. 2455 Teller Road, Thousand Oaks, CA 91320. Tel: 800-818-7243; Tel: 805-499-9774; Fax: 800-583-2665; e-mail: journals@sagepub.com; Web site: https://sagepub.com
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 23
Publication Date: 2024
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Descriptors: Medical Research, Health, Qualitative Research, Ethics, Researchers, Research Committees, Foreign Countries, Epistemology, Research Methodology
Geographic Terms: Germany
DOI: 10.1177/17470161231202135
ISSN: 1747-0161
2047-6094
Abstract: This study explores how qualitative health researchers navigate the demands of medical research ethics committees in Germany where qualitative research is subject to approval only when it is conducted in medical contexts. We present the results of a grounded theory study to investigate qualitative health researchers' experiences with procedural ethics and the strategies they adopt to navigate its demands. Our analysis revealed six dimensions of experience and three strategies adopted by researchers to navigate the demands of medical research ethics committees. All participants agreed that research ethics is of high importance in qualitative health research, but strategies to navigate the demands of medical research ethics committees ranged from avoiding, and adapting, to transforming the procedures of ethics review. Based on our findings, we provide recommendations for improving the ethics review of qualitative health research.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2024
Accession Number: EJ1420975
Database: ERIC
Full text is not displayed to guests.
FullText Links:
  – Type: pdflink
    Url: https://content.ebscohost.com/cds/retrieve?content=AQICAHj0k_4E0hTGH8RJwT4gCJyBsGNe_WN95AvKlDbXJGqwxwGl7-NceXVKmaRRw1_xW3oWAAAA4zCB4AYJKoZIhvcNAQcGoIHSMIHPAgEAMIHJBgkqhkiG9w0BBwEwHgYJYIZIAWUDBAEuMBEEDC2-vSh-blfkxOU9MQIBEICBm5NXlaw3rxBlgf2LtrpNJ-ICOtFGNWzl3Oca7nawpwnEvfV6usAaMTxdFkpAvv-TDo3gM7JrRQU4A_urhINAEIXXMvzfCrF3fLL_E6Lm3-S-Jx8ZdHWIZhaLf-DSpEhNzBaR3I71Al6fP3A2orWoaG56jpQJ6voJBXIETWa2LkVnNJmsyFECQyBho_6j3a0x7g7alVeTHM9cJw_n
Text:
  Availability: 1
  Value: <anid>AN0176610733;[euvk]01apr.24;2024Apr17.05:48;v2.2.500</anid> <title id="AN0176610733-1">Qualitative health research and procedural ethics: An interview study to investigate researchers' ways of navigating the demands of medical research ethics committees in Germany </title> <p>This study explores how qualitative health researchers navigate the demands of medical research ethics committees in Germany where qualitative research is subject to approval only when it is conducted in medical contexts. We present the results of a grounded theory study to investigate qualitative health researchers' experiences with procedural ethics and the strategies they adopt to navigate its demands. Our analysis revealed six dimensions of experience and three strategies adopted by researchers to navigate the demands of medical research ethics committees. All participants agreed that research ethics is of high importance in qualitative health research, but strategies to navigate the demands of medical research ethics committees ranged from avoiding, and adapting, to transforming the procedures of ethics review. Based on our findings, we provide recommendations for improving the ethics review of qualitative health research.</p> <p>Keywords: Health research; qualitative research; research ethics; research ethics committees; institutional review board; procedural ethics; Germany</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-2">Introduction</hd> <p>The obligation to obtain approval for medical research from an independent research ethics committee (REC) is enshrined in article 23 of the Declaration of Helsinki of the [<reflink idref="bib44" id="ref1">44</reflink>]. Legal and professional regulations and levels of implementation of this ethical requirement vary across the globe. For example, it is a requirement in countries such as Australia, Canada, South Africa, the UK and the US that researchers obtain ethics approval from a REC for all research involving humans, whether it be medical or social science research ([<reflink idref="bib1" id="ref2">1</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib8" id="ref3">8</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib12" id="ref4">12</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib14" id="ref5">14</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib16" id="ref6">16</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib29" id="ref7">29</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib31" id="ref8">31</reflink>]). The situation is different in countries such as Germany, Austria and Denmark.</p> <p>In Germany, research involving humans is subject to approval by a REC located at a medical faculty or a medical professional organisation if it is carried out by a physician or at a medical faculty or hospital, or if the participants are patients. On the other hand, there is no nationwide legal or professional obligation for social scientists working at the faculty of social sciences to obtain approval from an independent REC for research with humans, and specialist social science RECs are relatively uncommon in Germany ([<reflink idref="bib17" id="ref9">17</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib28" id="ref10">28</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib41" id="ref11">41</reflink>]). Whether qualitative health research is subject to independent review by a REC located at a medical faculty or medical professional organisation depends primarily on situational factors, such as where (medical hospital or faculty or elsewhere), by whom (physicians or non-physicians) and with whom (patients or nonpatients) the research is carried out, rather than the nature of the research methods or the level of risk involved. Qualitative health researchers in Germany, especially those affiliated with hospitals or medical faculties, face practical difficulties in navigating the ethics review process, as procedures and requirement can vary substantially from project to project.</p> <p>[<reflink idref="bib14" id="ref12">14</reflink>] term the full process leading up to obtaining ethics approval of a study from an independent REC 'procedural ethics'. Procedural ethics encompasses the development of materials like research protocols, participant information sheets, consent forms, and ethics application forms as well as communicating with the responsible REC ([<reflink idref="bib7" id="ref13">7</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib20" id="ref14">20</reflink>]). [<reflink idref="bib14" id="ref15">14</reflink>] contrast procedural ethics with 'ethics in practice', which refers to the practice of identifying, reflecting on, and addressing ethical issues during the research process (see also [<reflink idref="bib37" id="ref16">37</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib40" id="ref17">40</reflink>]). Although procedural ethics and ethics in practice may seem, superficially, to be distinct components of ethical research, [<reflink idref="bib14" id="ref18">14</reflink>] argue that there is considerable continuity between them, further enhancing the complexity of navigating these types of research.</p> <p>While there is extensive literature on the challenges of ethics review of qualitative social science and qualitative health research by RECs, this literature refers primarily to regulations and practices in anglophone countries ([<reflink idref="bib15" id="ref19">15</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib18" id="ref20">18</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib26" id="ref21">26</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib31" id="ref22">31</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib38" id="ref23">38</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib39" id="ref24">39</reflink>]). A number of scholars have criticised the development of institutionalised ethics review procedures because these formal procedures can pose barriers to scientifically important and socially valuable qualitative research ([<reflink idref="bib1" id="ref25">1</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib6" id="ref26">6</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib16" id="ref27">16</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib21" id="ref28">21</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib31" id="ref29">31</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib34" id="ref30">34</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib35" id="ref31">35</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib36" id="ref32">36</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib41" id="ref33">41</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib25" id="ref34">25</reflink>]). It has been argued that institutionalised ethics review procedures are especially likely to pose barriers to ethnographic and participatory research, as well as research with so-called 'vulnerable' individuals ([<reflink idref="bib3" id="ref35">3</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib2" id="ref36">2</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib9" id="ref37">9</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib18" id="ref38">18</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib23" id="ref39">23</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib38" id="ref40">38</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib39" id="ref41">39</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib24" id="ref42">24</reflink>]).</p> <p>One possible explanation for the challenges in the ethics review of qualitative health research, especially in countries with regulatory frameworks similar to those in Germany, is that review procedures of RECs located at medical faculties or medical professional organisations tend to be tailored to quantitative biomedical research. This can result in a mismatch between ethics review criteria and key methodological principles of qualitative research, such as the lack of predefined hypotheses, the openness towards unexpected outcomes, and the iterative nature of the research process ([<reflink idref="bib10" id="ref43">10</reflink>]). Moreover, the risks of qualitative research are less predictable because qualitative researchers exercise less control over their research setting than researchers using experimental and quantitative methods ([<reflink idref="bib4" id="ref44">4</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib23" id="ref45">23</reflink>]).</p> <p>Other authors have argued that challenges in the ethics review of qualitative research can be explained by features of the ethics review process itself ([<reflink idref="bib12" id="ref46">12</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib14" id="ref47">14</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib26" id="ref48">26</reflink>]). These authors contend that due to insufficient knowledge about qualitative research methodology amongst their members, RECs apply ethics review criteria rigidly and are unable to adapt them to qualitative research approaches ([<reflink idref="bib8" id="ref49">8</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib21" id="ref50">21</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib22" id="ref51">22</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib26" id="ref52">26</reflink>]).</p> <p>Still, other authors envisage a more positive role for RECs in the ethics review of qualitative health research. They have contended that the differences between quantitative and qualitative methods and the challenges inherent in the ethics review of qualitative health research have been overstated and that qualitative health research must be subject to ethics review by an independent research committee ([<reflink idref="bib19" id="ref53">19</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib27" id="ref54">27</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib42" id="ref55">42</reflink>]). These authors also proposed models that aim to address the identified challenges and increase the competence of RECs in the review of proposals that include qualitative methodologies.</p> <p>The main research question for the current interview study was as follows: How do qualitative health researchers navigate the demands of medical RECs in contexts in which qualitative research is subject to approval by a REC only when it is conducted in medical contexts? Qualitative health research in Germany is an illustrative example in this regard. The focus of our interview study was on experiences with medical RECs rather than with RECs in general (including committees located at other faculties). For ease of expression, the term 'REC' will be understood as referring to a medical REC. Recommendations for improving the ethics review practice for qualitative health research can be developed based on our findings.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-3">Methods</hd> <p>We followed the methodology of grounded theory according to [<reflink idref="bib32" id="ref56">32</reflink>]. Grounded theory is a qualitative methodology that aims to develop middle-range theory from the data rather than simply undertaking descriptive analysis. The interplay of data collection and analysis is a core feature of the methodology; data analysis is initiated once the first data has been collected and the results of the analysis of the first data guides further data collection. While concepts are to be derived from the data, the use of so-called 'sensitising concepts' enabled us to make use of our prior literature-based knowledge and personal experience with the ethics review process.</p> <p>The research team included one researcher with a background in sociology, one in social sciences, and one in philosophy and medical ethics. Two researchers had experience in applying for ethics approval from a REC and one researcher served on a medical REC.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-4">Sampling strategy</hd> <p>We used theoretical sampling to generate the sample so that the nature of the sample was guided by the results from the preliminary data analysis and the provisional theory constructed ([<reflink idref="bib13" id="ref57">13</reflink>]). The initial inclusion criteria were:</p> <p></p> <ulist> <item> being a researcher with expertise in qualitative health research; and</item> <p></p> <item> having experience in applying for ethics approval from a medical REC for qualitative health research projects in Germany.</item> </ulist> <p>In accordance with the method of theoretical sampling, we determined additional dimensions based on the analysis of the first data collected. The additional dimensions that we identified were professional background, university faculty, and level of experience with ethics applications.</p> <p>An initial list of potential research participants was made based on the contact details of authors of articles in qualitative health research and referrals from colleagues in our own network. SP screened the profiles of these researchers on their university homepages using the initial inclusion criteria and later also the additional dimensions. Researchers were approached for research participation only if they were likely to meet the inclusion criteria based on the information on their public personal profile. We sent out invitations in sets of three, started data collection and analysis as soon as we secured an interview, and sent out the next set of invitations only after the initial data analysis of the previous set was concluded. In the full process, a total number of 25 potential participants were contacted via email, some of whom distributed the invitation to their colleagues. Of the people we approached directly, three did not fulfil the inclusion criteria, seven declined research participation, nine did not respond and seven agreed to participate.</p> <p>Although we initially set out to include more participants to cover the additional dimensions (i.e. professional background, university faculty, and level of experience with ethics applications), our working assumption that the nature of the data collected would depend on these factors was not confirmed during the further analysis. Moreover, the data collected from the seven interviews was so rich that we believe we reached theoretical saturation regarding our main research question.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-5">Data collection</hd> <p>Data were collected by means of problem-centred interviews ([<reflink idref="bib43" id="ref58">43</reflink>]). The problem-centred interview is a semi-structured interview method that aims to elicit the experiences and views of participants about a specific problem or topic. While they are more structured than narrative interviews, problem-centred interviews enable researchers to combine structure and openness by using open questions to prompt free narratives and actively relating these narratives to the problem or topic under discussion ([<reflink idref="bib43" id="ref59">43</reflink>]). SP conducted the interviews in Germany via zoom or telephone, depending on the preferences of individual participants between June and November 2021. Carrying out face-to-face interviews was not possible due to Covid-related restrictions. The interviews lasted between 22 and 62 minutes excluding pre- and post-conversations, where only one interview lasted 22 minutes and the duration of the other interviews was close to an hour. All interviews were audio-recorded and then transcribed verbatim by FR. The data analysis was carried out using the original German transcripts. The interview excerpts quoted in the article were translated into English with the assistance of a native English speaker. We tried to stay as close as possible to the original German transcripts when translating, but sometimes it was necessary to find idiom and set phrases in the English language with a comparable meaning to ensure comprehensibility while preserving meaning.</p> <p>The interview guide included open narrative questions to participants about:</p> <p></p> <ulist> <item> their experience in applying for ethics approval from the responsible REC for qualitative health research projects in Germany;</item> <p></p> <item> their experience with challenges in the ethics review practice; and</item> <p></p> <item> their suggestions for improving the ethics review practice of qualitative health research.</item> </ulist> <hd id="AN0176610733-6">Data analysis</hd> <p>We used the MAXQDA 2020 Standard software (VERBI Software GmbH, Berlin, Germany) for data analysis. SP and FR began open coding the data after the first data was collected and followed an iterative data analysis process. Each researcher worked on a separate transcript first and then exchanged these transcripts and crosschecked the transcript that the other researcher had worked on to ensure intersubjective comprehensibility. The researchers added, changed and restructured codes while crosschecking, and all changes made were discussed between SP and FR until consensus was reached. The researchers each formulated working assumptions during the analysis, and these were documented using memos. The other researcher provided feedback and expanded on the working assumptions documented in the memos while cross checking. Disagreements were discussed until consensus was reached. Using axial coding in a next step, SP and FR jointly adapted and restructured the initially emerging codes by comparing codes across transcripts and focusing on the data from the perspective of the working assumptions that emerged from the initial analysis. In a final step, SP and FR jointly distilled a middle-range theory from the data using selective coding, resulting in the reconstruction of three strategies for dealing with procedural ethics. All steps of the iterative data analysis were discussed continuously between SP and FR until agreement on the final interpretation was reached. Provisional results of the data analysis were repeatedly discussed with MS to improve intersubjective and interdisciplinary comprehensibility of the analysis.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-7">Ethical considerations</hd> <p>Research participants were informed about the details of the study, both verbally and in writing, and gave their written informed consent before participating in the study. Although the study was not conducted with patients nor in a clinical context, it was subject to approval by the REC because members of the research team were affiliated to the faculty of medicine. The study received ethics approval from the REC of the medical faculty of the Ruhr University Bochum (registration no 20-7133).</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-8">Results</hd> <p></p> <hd id="AN0176610733-9">Sample characteristics</hd> <p>The final sample consisted of seven researchers. Sample characteristics are summarised in Table 1.</p> <p>Graph</p> <p>Table 1. Sample characteristics.</p> <p> <ephtml> <table><colgroup><col align="left" /><col align="char" char="." /></colgroup><thead><tr><th align="left">Dimension</th><th align="left">Description</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Experience with ethics applications</td><td>From 1 to numerous applications</td></tr><tr><td>Academic position</td><td>Professors (<italic>n</italic> = 2), postdoc (<italic>n</italic> = 3), doctoral candidate (<italic>n</italic> = 2)</td></tr><tr><td>Professional background</td><td>Sociology (<italic>n</italic> = 2), psychology (<italic>n</italic> = 2), medicine (<italic>n</italic> = 2), law (<italic>n</italic> = 1)</td></tr><tr><td>University faculty</td><td>Medicine (<italic>n</italic> = 4), philosophy (<italic>n</italic> = 1), psychology (<italic>n</italic> = 1), social sciences (<italic>n</italic> = 1)</td></tr><tr><td>Experience as a member of a REC</td><td><italic>n</italic> = 2</td></tr></tbody></table> </ephtml> </p> <hd id="AN0176610733-10">Overview of results</hd> <p>We developed two main categories from the data analysis and pre-structuring of the data according to the themes of the interview guide: <emph>researchers' experiences with procedural ethics</emph> and <emph>researchers' strategies in negotiating procedural ethics.</emph> Within these categories, we have reconstructed six dimensions of experience and three strategies. While dimensions of experience are at a more descriptive level, the strategies represent a mid-range theory constructed from the data. Figure 1 provides an overview of the results.</p> <p>Graph: Figure 1. Overview of results.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-11">Dimensions of researchers' experiences with procedural ethics</hd> <p>This category includes both positive and negative appraisals of experiences of researchers with procedural ethics.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-12">Structural dependence on ethics approval</hd> <p>An important dimension of experience that we revealed from the data is the structural dependence of researchers on ethics approval. Participants addressed the requirements of international journals, typically from the Anglo-American area, that all submitted articles reporting results from studies with humans have ethics approval from an independent REC. This requirement sometimes contradicted the advice and guidance of the local REC, which did not require ethics review for the study. This lack of consistency between the requirements for ethics approval of international journals and local RECs can lead to uncertain situations for researchers.</p> <p> <emph>Sometimes it was the case that we did not necessarily need to submit an application according to the requirements of the local ethics committee. However, we submitted applications even for projects that did not actually require ethics approval because of the publication requirements of journals in the Anglo-American area. (Participant 1)</emph> </p> <p>This kind of structural dependency relates to the requirements not only of international journals but also of national and international funding agencies. Some agencies require ethics approval by the local REC at the time at which a funding application for research with human participants is made. The situation becomes more pressing for researchers if the time frame for obtaining ethics approval is longer. One participant emphasised this kind of structural dependency of researchers by attributing a 'position of power' to RECs:</p> <p> <emph>It [gives RECs] also a certain position of power, whether you get approval or not, and what is perhaps also a factor is a certain swiftness. You are also bound to time frames of funding in research projects, and we waited a very long time for an application a while ago. I found that very difficult, also considering the project partners. (Participant 2)</emph> </p> <p>This research participant attributes a position of power to RECs, not merely because they can decide whether a study is carried out, but also because their procedures and time frames can indirectly dictate whether or not researchers can submit a funding application and fulfil their obligations to project partners on the proposal.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-13">Diverging epistemological approaches</hd> <p>Another dimension of experience with procedural ethics is the variety of epistemological approaches – such as social constructivism and positivism – among members of RECs and applicants. Positivistic epistemological assumptions are reflected in the specialisation of medical RECs' assessment of clinical research and medical trials that use a quantitative research design. Participants emphasised that epistemological assumptions go hand in hand with judgements about scientific quality and suitable research methods, and these assumptions result in judgements about what is good science, and which methodological approach is legitimate.</p> <p> <emph>I believe that one of the most prominent problems that arises when you approach an ethics committee at a medical faculty is that they are specialised in clinical studies and clinical trials. These are research projects in the field of natural science; but with qualitative research, we are moving more into the social sciences, and that's where quite different ideas of science and the legitimacy of scientific procedures come together. (Participant 3)</emph> </p> <p>Problems for qualitative researchers can arise when RECs evaluate qualitative studies based on quality criteria for quantitative research methods.</p> <p> <emph>But one [member of the REC] had an objection, a substantive objection. He had serious objections to the study as such, to the scientific design of the study, because he thought that no representative findings could be expected and that nothing sensible could result from it. In other words, it became clear that he was more interested in quantitative, biological studies. (Participant 4)</emph> </p> <p>Further assumptions about research methods and quality criteria are also reflected in unsuitable guidance materials and templates provided by RECs for qualitative studies. RECs often expect a well-defined hypothesis, a sample size calculation, and a fixed research protocol in advance. However, establishing these things before study commencement is at odds with the idea of open qualitative study designs, as a participant noted:</p> <p> <emph>And I think that leads to difficulties in many areas. It starts with the fact that the templates that are provided for the study protocol, the application or the participation information do not really fit the procedure of a qualitative study, and that it is also assumed that you can explain everything you want to do at the beginning of the study, which is not so easy with qualitative research because you want to conduct it with a certain openness. (Participant 3)</emph> </p> <hd id="AN0176610733-14">Composition of the REC</hd> <p>The composition of a REC is a further dimension of qualitative researchers' experience with the practice of ethics review. Participants emphasised how individual members of a REC shape the committee's understanding of the scientific quality and practise of ethics review. They thus assigned special importance to the inclusion in RECs of members with knowledge and experience of qualitative research.</p> <p> <emph>Every research ethics committee is also strongly influenced by the people who make up this research ethics committee and who are involved in its decisions. For many years, we had a chairman who comes from the field of medical ethics and theory and was, therefore, more open to these qualitative approaches. I believe that this influenced the research ethics committee to a certain extent, such that there was just also a greater openness regarding qualitative approaches. (Participant 7)</emph> </p> <p>In addition, participants mentioned the personal values of individual committee members as a factor influencing the ethics review process. The personal values of individual members can play a decisive role in determining which research is considered ethically sensitive and which is not. This can lead to inconsistencies between REC members.</p> <p> <emph>I think that the review practice of research ethics committees can be quite inconsistent. Which feedback you get also depends on the particular review processes. For one doctor, it is unproblematic and for another, who has more of a psychiatric perspective, who thinks, how could you do that? [...] Well, that's because these are people who are evaluating this, and although they have some suggestions and information based on which they are supposed to evaluate it, they also have their own value systems that they bring to the review practice. I don't think that can be removed from the concept to any extent. That is simply part of it. (Participant 3)</emph> </p> <p>Another participant ascribed a particularly pronounced sensitivity to ethical issues to medical RECs in light of the long history of research ethics in the field of medicine.</p> <p> <emph>It seems to me that one difference between medical and nonmedical faculties regarding the research ethics committee is that there is a much clearer understanding at medical faculties of what pitfalls can arise from an ethical point of view. Particularly concerning vulnerability, emotional distress, and how can I best get to grips with that, including in qualitative studies. Yes, working with this openness seems to me to be better regulated at medical universities than at those that do not deal with medical topics, that do not come from this tradition of clinical trials on medication. It seems to me that there is still a degree of uncertainty there. (Participant 7)</emph> </p> <p>Opposing the view that medical RECs are not suitable for the ethics review of qualitative research, this participant contended that, in virtue of the long history of research ethics in clinical trials, RECs at medical faculties may be better at identifying potential ethical issues in qualitative research than research committees in other faculties. The combination of medical experience and experience in RECs can thus also be a positive factor in the ethics review of qualitative research.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-15">Self-understanding of the REC</hd> <p>We identified the self-understanding of the REC as another dimension of experience revealing two main types: the REC as an advisory or the REC as a supervisory body.</p> <p> <emph>I think that's the self-understanding of the respective REC, whether they see themselves more as a strict review board or whether they also somehow claim a kind of advisory function for themselves and, in their feedback somehow, whether the queries come across as appreciative of the research idea or rather: what were you thinking? (Participant 2)</emph> </p> <p>Formal written feedback and the lack of personal exchange with applicants were seen as typical for a REC that perceives itself as a supervisory body.</p> <p> <emph>It's very much written down, very formal. That's a pity, because perhaps this consulting aspect is missing. That's really a pity because that could be, that would be very helpful if it were like that. (Participant 2)</emph> </p> <p>Participants sometimes missed the advisory function of RECs, and they saw this function as being replaced by supervision, standardisation, and bureaucracy. Some participants underlined that RECs could offer their special ethical expertise to researchers instead of monitoring them. They wished to make use of the ethical and legal expertise in RECs because they encountered challenges in their research which they were unable to resolve by themselves. A concrete example of such a challenge is data management.</p> <p> <emph>You could also see it [the REC] more as a body of expertise that supports you and not so much as a check on whether we have done everything right. Well and that's where we have a need. [...] Whether, for example, we can store certain things in the cloud, the one that the university uses, whether it is encrypted enough, or whether we still have to do our own encryption or even how that works. (Participant 4)</emph> </p> <p>Participants considered face-to-face exchanges as an important element of the advisory role. One participant emphasised that face-to-face exchanges offer a better opportunity to discuss and address ethically problematic issues.</p> <p> <emph>According to the advice of the REC, as soon as something is unclear, if you are not sure, it is better to consult once more. Especially if the collaboration is good and you have the feeling that you can openly address and discuss problems, I think that's a sensible way. (Participant 1)</emph> </p> <hd id="AN0176610733-16">Communication and interaction with applicants</hd> <p>The experience of our participants was that the self-image of a REC affects how it communicates and interacts with applicants before and during the review process. One participant referred to the tone of voice used by RECs. The tone of voice was seen as reflecting the level of engagement of committee members with the details of the research project during the ethics review process.</p> <p> <emph>In that context, I think, honestly, the manner of treating the researchers [is most important]. Thus, this kind of demand, whether it's a demand of interest, how much you've thought it through. Things like that. [...] That can be difficult to grasp, but this, the tone of the exchange with each other is, I think, dependent on the self-understanding of the committee. (Participant 2)</emph> </p> <p>Excerpts like this one suggest that researchers can interpret feedback from the REC in different ways depending on the committee's tone of voice when providing feedback. The style of communication also signals whether communication is at eye level and in an advisory capacity, or whether it is hierarchical, in a supervisory capacity.</p> <p>Some participants pointed out that the expectations of the RECs were not transparent. Because of this lack of transparency, they felt insecure about how to present their research project when they were invited to give a face-to-face presentations.</p> <p> <emph>That was the case, we didn't know at first what to expect and had made a pitch accordingly. We had written down what the possible questions could be and then they didn't come up at all, so to speak, the difficulties we had thought about in terms of content. They were not interested in that at all. The whole conversation lasted only ten minutes. [...] My colleague was called into the meeting room half an hour late, where ten older gentlemen, average age probably around 70, and a woman were sitting very closely together. So, only the setting already, well, and then he was asked to briefly introduce the project. He did that. Then there was a round in which everyone was asked whether they had any concerns and then the comments were quoted for the minutes, and he was then dismissed again. (Participant 4)</emph> </p> <p>This interview excerpt shows that a face-to-face meeting does not necessarily change the interaction between the REC and individual researchers for the better. Regardless of whether the communication is in writing or verbal, the manner of communication is important to researchers' experience of the ethics review process. Participants found it important, for example, that they are being listened to, that the criteria against which their study is evaluated are transparent, and that the feedback they receive is constructive and professional.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-17">Application and review process</hd> <p>Participants reported a variety of experiences including the review procedure and the duration, and financial costs of the application. We categorised these experiences as belonging to the dimension of experience application and review process. Some participants reported that the time frame for the ethics review process is too long.</p> <p> <emph>And then it took a while, which I also considered a challenge, that they don't have regular meetings, this research ethics committee. (Participant 4)</emph> </p> <p>Others reported that, at their institution, expedited review procedures were in place for research with no more than minimal risks and burdens for research participants. One participant pointed to an expedited checklist procedure for this type of research that was in place at the local REC, and which shortened the application process.</p> <p> <emph>The good thing about us, I don't know if this is generally the case, is that we have a checklist procedure. When it is clear in advance that there will be no highly dramatic invasive things in the study, then you can submit a kind of abbreviated ethics application, so to speak, where you work through such a checklist. (Participant 6)</emph> </p> <p>Some participants reported that their RECs require a quite substantial fee to be paid upon submission of an ethics application. This posed an obstacle, especially for qualitative researchers who were not or do not want to be part of larger research groups with a high budget. One participant noted that the fees attached to an ethics application pose a hurdle to innovation in research and emphasised that an expedited application and review process free of costs offers the opportunity for independent research.</p> <p> <emph>In our case, it doesn't cost anything, and I find it absolutely outrageous when an ethics application costs money. So, sorry, but that's... that's outrageous. So, no, simply no. Everything about it is wrong... especially for two reasons. One is that innovative research is hindered, because I, for example, I could easily have carried out research as an add-on to already existing larger projects in the department. [...] But I wanted to do something on my own, so I put a lot of work into it and discovered things where there is a big research gap, but also a great practical relevance for healthcare. But if I had had to pay several hundred euros for an ethics application, I don't think I would have done that. (Participant 6)</emph> </p> <hd id="AN0176610733-18">Researchers' strategies to negotiate procedural ethics</hd> <p>We reconstructed from the data a mid-range theory including three types of strategy that qualitative researchers adopt to navigate procedural ethics. These are the <emph>strategy of avoiding procedural ethics</emph>, the <emph>strategy of adapting to procedural ethics</emph>, and the <emph>strategy of transforming procedural ethics</emph>. These strategies are general types that we reconstructed theoretically based on data across transcripts, where single transcripts showed patterns of multiple strategies. The strategies were adopted across the dimensions of the sample, notably experience with ethics applications, academic position, professional background, and faculty affiliation. Which strategies individual researchers adopted depended not so much on their personal characteristics or attitudes, but rather on the context in which they conducted their research and their experiences with their local RECs.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-19">Avoiding procedural ethics</hd> <p>The strategy of avoiding procedural ethics involves making strategic changes to the research design and protocol to circumvent the obligation to obtain ethics approval. The regulatory framework in Germany does not require researchers to submit their research to the local REC for ethics review if the research is not carried out by physicians, at a medical faculty or hospital, and does not involve patients. Frustrating experiences with procedural ethics on the part of applicants (e.g. rejection of an application without adequate justification) can lead researchers to adopt the strategy of avoiding procedural ethics by adapting their research in such a way that they can conduct it within legal and professional limits, but without ethics approval by a REC. For example, a participant reported a situation in which the researchers switched from finding patients to community volunteers as prospective participants to circumvent the medical REC, which was the only REC available at the university. In the case at hand, the study was subject to ethics approval by the medical REC because the initial approach to finding research participants was via a hospital.</p> <p> <emph>They gave no productive, constructive indications for how this could be changed, but we were simply told: No, we can't approve it [the study]. And we did not actually make a second attempt. That might have worked, but we decided anyway not to take this approach [...]. We then found interview partners through other channels, and we were not bound by the necessity to obtain ethics approval. So that's also interesting anyway, so where do you have to obtain an ethics approval at all and where not? (Participant 4)</emph> </p> <p>The research team was able to adopt the strategy of avoidance because none of the team members were medical professionals or affiliated with a medical faculty or hospital, and the team ultimately decided not to enrol patients. The interview excerpt demonstrates the lack of transparency regarding which research studies require ethics review and which do not, and why.</p> <p>Although the strategy of avoiding procedural ethics removes obstacles to carrying out qualitative health research, it creates uncertainty regarding the dissemination of results. This is because most international journals require that all reported studies have received ethics approval from an independent REC. Given the lack of agreement between the German regulatory framework and the requirements of international journals, the aforementioned lack of transparency can lead to situations in which researchers see the need for ethics approval only upon submission of the research report to an international journal. This can lead researchers to submit their research to the local REC retrospectively.</p> <p> <emph>Frankly speaking, I once asked for a retroactive review, which was not supposed to happen, because we did not really expect it [that we needed ethics approval]. [...] Regarding an article, we were asked by the journals whether we had ethics approval. As I said, we did not. I then asked for a retrospective review by the ethics committee. And they said: well, against this background it wouldn't be necessary, so it would be harmless. Actually, in the meantime, it was also stated in the documents of the research ethics committee that something like this is definitely not supposed to happen, to request [ethics approval] retrospectively. (Participant 1)</emph> </p> <p>We interpreted the practice of applying for retrospective ethics approval for research merely for dissemination purposes as part of the strategy of avoidance because it is a practice that is fundamentally at odds with the purposes of ethics review. Researchers' desire to avoid having to apply for ethics review retrospectively can lead them to adopt the second strategy of negotiating procedural ethics, which we have identified as <emph>adapting to procedural ethics</emph>.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-20">Adapting to procedural ethics</hd> <p>The strategy of adapting to procedural ethics involves fulfilling the formal requirements for ethics review without a strong commitment to ethical reflection upon the research design and process. Although the strategy is predominantly tactical, it does not imply that researchers who adopt the strategy consider research ethics in general as unimportant. The strategy of adapting to procedural ethics grants researchers the assurance that they can carry out their research while avoiding uncertainties about the dissemination of their results in international journals. Reflecting on the time when they requested retrospective ethics approval, the participant continued to tell us the following:</p> <p> <emph>Interestingly, since then, and based on this experience, an application is always submitted for the studies that we run. (Participant 1)</emph> </p> <p>This might not lead to the improvement of the ethical quality of research, as researchers may adopt a pragmatic attitude and submit applications for ethics review in a merely precautionary and defensive manner.</p> <p> <emph>We submit all the projects we conduct for ethics review. All projects that in some way or other involve people. We also submit things to get ourselves, let's say, 'a certificate of no objection', which states that the research doesn't have to be reviewed. That happens all the time. (Participant 2)</emph> </p> <p>Submitting precautionary ethics applications is a way of dealing with bureaucratic and procedural requirements rather than a way of improving the ethical quality of research. This is why we conceptualise this strategy as adapting to procedural ethics. This does not imply, however, that those who adopt the strategy of adaptation consider research ethics to be unimportant. Rather, qualitative researchers who adopt this strategy often do not expect helpful advice from the local REC or are trying to avoid becoming stuck between the requirements of the local REC and those of the international journals upon which they are structurally dependent.</p> <p>In this context, qualitative researchers sometimes try to get advice informally about what can be done to improve the chance that one's research projects is approved by the REC. Colleagues who are members of the REC provide a gateway to this information, as the following quote highlights:</p> <p> <emph>We certainly had the advantage that I knew the managing director of the research ethics committee from my studies and that he was also open to the problems on the researcher's side. Sometimes I asked him directly and then sat down with him and the head of the research ethics committee and it was actually a very good collegial relationship. (Participant 1)</emph> </p> <p>We interpreted this use of personal contacts with members of the REC for informal preliminary assessment and advice as a form of adaptation if it is merely a pragmatic strategy to improve one's chances of success in getting ethics approval of one's research project rather than a genuine research ethics consultation. This informal preliminary assessment and advice can also be categorised as belonging to the third type of strategy – that of transformation – if the main concern is to improve the ethical quality of the research.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-21">Transforming procedural ethics</hd> <p>The strategy of transforming procedural ethics involves attempts by researchers to improve the ethical quality of their own research as well as the quality of ethics review. Like the other two strategies mentioned earlier, this strategy also emerged in response to frustrating experiences with the ethics review process and targets both the REC and the applicants themselves; applicants need to write better ethics applications for qualitative studies, and REC members need more expertise in qualitative research for an adequate review. Participants were self-critical and their strategies aimed at improvement of ethical reflection in qualitative health research on the part of both RECs and applicants. One concrete proposal was to submit high-quality ethics applications for qualitative studies, including a comprehensive and clear presentation of the qualitative approach and methods. In this way, applicants compensate for a lack of knowledge about qualitative research amongst members of a REC and pursue a strategy of adaptation. At the same time, a strategy of transformation is gradually emerging as qualitative researchers implicitly enlighten members of RECs about the value and usefulness of qualitative research approaches. Qualitative and quantitative methods serve different purposes, and both have their own scientific legitimation.</p> <p> <emph>It is very important for the quality of especially qualitative research to justify [research studies], to really think them through, and also to ensure that they are theoretically and methodically sound. Especially in medicine. I think it is also very essential for us to maintain good quality and to make it clear within the field of medicine that this is also high-quality research and that qualitative research is not just an appendage, as it has been for a long time, especially in medicine, and is not taken seriously, and I have the feeling that there has been some change, but it somehow works in both ways. If we bring good quality, then it is also more likely to be recognised as such, including by the ethics committee. (Participant 7)</emph> </p> <p>Participants also referred to the importance of a stronger anchoring of ethical reflection in teaching and supervision to achieve qualitative research of good methodological and ethical quality. A greater sensitivity to ethical issues in research can be achieved amongst students and early-career scientists through teaching and supervision. This should include knowledge of the principles of research ethics and procedural ethics as well as education about research ethics of practice, which is particularly important in qualitative research.</p> <p> <emph>We [qualitative health researchers] try to convey this in the training or when I lead a project, then I try to reflect and make decisions together with the research team when something unforeseen occurs, so that this reflection on research ethics simply has its place in the research itself. I think that's totally important. (Participant 3)</emph> </p> <p>Another strategy of transformation is the change of perspective from a qualitative researcher and applicant to a member of a REC. One participant accepted an invitation to become a member of a REC and described the experiences associated with this change of perspective as follows:</p> <p> <emph>And now [as a member of the REC] I see things from the other side. Now I receive a lot of qualitative research projects [for review] and think to myself, wow, what are they doing there? And do the others who are reviewing these projects even get that? Yes, there are perhaps some things that are taken too lightly because the background [of the medical REC members] doesn't fit. (Participant 3)</emph> </p> <p>The participant here described how she was able to see many of the ethical issues in qualitative research only after she became a member of the REC, and she expressed the concern that members with primarily medical expertise might fail to identify these issues (e.g. because they might assume that qualitative research is ethically unproblematic because it is not invasive). The participant underlined once more that change should work in two ways: RECs should become more sensitive to the particularities of qualitative research designs, and qualitative health researchers should acquire the competence to state their aims, methods, and ways of addressing ethical issues with more clarity. Transformation should occur in both directions.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-22">Discussion</hd> <p>Our results reveal six different dimensions of experience of qualitative health researchers with procedural ethics and three strategies to deal with it: avoidance, adaptation, and transformation. Although our findings relate to qualitative health research, some of the findings may have a broader meaning and be valid for other types of qualitative research as well. Which of the three strategies was adopted by researchers depended primarily on their experiences with the local REC. The importance of experiences with the local REC for the strategy adopted by researchers is reflected in five of the six dimensions of experience, namely the composition of the REC, its epistemological approach, its self-understanding, its style of communication, and the structure of its processes and procedures. Experiences like these have been reported in the literature, for example, in relation to the quality of communication ([<reflink idref="bib5" id="ref60">5</reflink>]; [<reflink idref="bib15" id="ref61">15</reflink>]), differing epistemological approaches ([<reflink idref="bib38" id="ref62">38</reflink>]), and lack of knowledge, not only about qualitative methods but also about emerging technologies such as big data ([<reflink idref="bib11" id="ref63">11</reflink>]) and social media ([<reflink idref="bib30" id="ref64">30</reflink>]).</p> <p>One dimension of experience that influenced researchers' strategies was not dependent on researchers' experiences with the local REC, namely the structural dependence of researchers on ethics approval. This experience was due to the discrepancies between the requirements of international journals and funding agencies, promoting the strategy of adapting to procedural ethics. The adaptive strategy gives researchers assurance that they can carry out their research and disseminate the results.</p> <p>Despite the differences in the legal regulations and practical implementation of the ethics review of qualitative health research between Germany and Anglophone countries, there are various similarities between qualitative researchers' responses to procedural ethics. Pragmatism in dealing with procedural ethics, as reflected in our strategy of adaptation, for example, was also described by [<reflink idref="bib38" id="ref65">38</reflink>], who conducted an extended ethnographic study on ethics review practices relating to qualitative social science research in the US and Canada. [<reflink idref="bib38" id="ref66">38</reflink>] examined strategies that researchers adopt to deal with the demands of research ethics boards, which range 'from total avoidance to full compliance' (p. 17). Like Van den Hoonaard, we understand the avoidance of procedural ethics as a pragmatic response of researchers to their experiences with the local REC rather than an ethical orientation of researchers, as [<reflink idref="bib33" id="ref67">33</reflink>] understand it. At the same time, [<reflink idref="bib38" id="ref68">38</reflink>] strategy of avoidance encompasses many forms of avoidance that are not reflected in our results, such as researchers opting for off-campus contract research not subject to ethical review, or using anecdotal accounts as data (p. 201). This discrepancy between findings can be explained by differences in the 'loopholes' in the applying regulatory frameworks.</p> <p>[<reflink idref="bib33" id="ref69">33</reflink>] identified three types of responses of qualitative sociologists to REC inquiries in Canada: 'active engagement, apparent compliance, and overt opposition' (p. 162). While active engagement is comparable to the strategy of transformation and apparent compliance comparable to the strategy of adaptation, we did not find a strategy comparable to overt opposition. One possible explanation of this is that our sample was not heterogeneous enough for attitudes of overt opposition to emerge. It was not practically possible to actively seek out additional research participants displaying this attitude overtly, as such public displays of opposition towards ethical research procedures are rare. More plausible to us is that qualitative research outside of the health context is not generally subject to ethics review in Germany. As a consequence of this, overt opposition might not be necessary for those who can avoid difficulties by using other strategies. Our analysis suggested, moreover, that qualitative health researchers who cannot avoid procedural ethics because they are physicians or work at a medical faculty are less inclined to oppose procedural ethics. Our sample included researchers who were socialised, at least to some degree, in medicine, and the institutionalisation of ethics review has a long history in this discipline in comparison to the relatively new developments in social science research ([<reflink idref="bib42" id="ref70">42</reflink>]). This can also account for the fact that we did not find extreme responses like overt opposition.</p> <p>[<reflink idref="bib33" id="ref71">33</reflink>] conclude from their analysis that the type of strategy adopted 'depends partially on social structural factors such as gender, age, and institutional membership that determine what sources of power are available to individual academics' (p. 162). Our study did not confirm this finding. Although our method does not allow us to define conclusive associations, the three strategies were adopted across the dimensions of the sample, notably experience with ethics applications, academic position, professional background, and faculty affiliation. Our analysis indicated, moreover, that researchers opt for a specific strategy depending on their experiences with their local REC, rather than their ethical orientation.</p> <p>A potential limitation of our study is its relatively small sample size. Finding suitable participants was difficult due to the narrow inclusion criteria of our study. The potential sensitivity of the research topic, in combination with the precarity of academic jobs and careers, could also have played a role in our lower response rates. Given the explorative nature of the study, the findings might not describe the experiences and strategies of qualitative health researchers in navigating the demands of RECs in an exhaustive way. On the other hand, the data collected in seven interviews was already so rich that we did not expect to find additional experiences or strategies by carrying out more interviews. The focus of our study was on the experiences of qualitative health researchers with medical RECs in Germany. More research is needed to explore the experiences of qualitative health researchers working in Germany with RECs at other faculties. The applicability of our findings to other national contexts is limited by the fact that the German regulatory framework is rather unique. At the same time, this can also be considered a strength of our study. Given the ample evidence available on the ethics review of qualitative health research in English-speaking countries, our findings usefully complement the available evidence base.</p> <hd id="AN0176610733-23">Conclusions and recommendations</hd> <p>Our study provides important insights into the experiences of qualitative health researchers with RECs in Germany and the strategies they adopt to navigate the demands of procedural ethics. Findings from our study can inform attempts to improve the quality of the ethics review of qualitative health research. They can also inform training modules for members of RECs to raise awareness regarding the challenges faced by qualitative health researchers. The following suggestions for improvement of the ethics review process for qualitative health research can be derived from our findings:</p> <p></p> <ulist> <item> RECs and qualitative health researchers should communicate with each other in respectful and appreciative ways.</item> <p></p> <item> Qualitative health researchers should have the opportunity to receive advice from the REC before they apply for ethics approval.</item> <p></p> <item> RECs should display transparency regarding the requirements, expectations, and evaluation criteria for qualitative health research.</item> <p></p> <item> RECs should make available templates tailored to qualitative research, including queries to tease out potential ethical challenges.</item> <p></p> <item> RECs should include members with expertise in qualitative methods.</item> <p></p> <item> Members of RECs should be informed about the particularities of qualitative research.</item> <p></p> <item> A module on research ethics should be integrated in the curriculum of social science studies and the training of qualitative health researchers.</item> </ulist> <p>It remains to be investigated whether these suggestions for improvement can count on consensus among all relevant stakeholders, notably members of RECs.</p> <p>We thank Carla Scheytt for her helpful comments on an earlier draft of the manuscript and we thank all the people who took the time to participate in our study.</p> <ref id="AN0176610733-24"> <title> References </title> <blist> <bibl id="bib1" idref="ref2" type="bt">1</bibl> <bibtext> Allbutt H, Masters H. (2010). Ethnography and the ethics of undertaking research in different mental healthcare settings. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing. 17(3): 210–215.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibl id="bib2" idref="ref36" type="bt">2</bibl> <bibtext> Bell E, Racine E, Chiasson P, et al. (2014). Beyond consent in research. Revisiting vulnerability in deep brain stimulation for psychiatric disorders. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics. 23(3): 361–368.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibl id="bib3" idref="ref35" type="bt">3</bibl> <bibtext> Bell K. (2014). Resisting commensurability: Against informed consent as an anthropological virtue. American Anthropologist. 116(3): 511–522.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibl id="bib4" idref="ref44" type="bt">4</bibl> <bibtext> Bosk CL, Vries RG de. (2004). Bureaucracies of mass deception: Institutional Review Boards and the ethics of ethnographic research. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 2004; 595: 249–263.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibl id="bib5" idref="ref60" type="bt">5</bibl> <bibtext> Brown C, Spiro J, Quinton S. (2020). The role of RECs: Friend or foe in educational research? An exploratory study. British Educational Research Journal. 46(4): 747–769.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibl id="bib6" idref="ref26" type="bt">6</bibl> <bibtext> Cannella GS, Lincoln YS. (2018) Ethics, research regulations and critical social science. In: Denzin NK, Lincoln YS (eds) The Sage Handbook of Qualitative Research, 5th edn.London: Sage Publications, 172–194.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibl id="bib7" idref="ref13" type="bt">7</bibl> <bibtext> Chiumento A, Rahman A, Frith L. (2020). Writing to template: Researchers' negotiation of procedural research ethics. Social Science & Medicine (1967). 255: 112980.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibl id="bib8" idref="ref3" type="bt">8</bibl> <bibtext> Cutcliffe JR, Ramcharan P. (2002). Leveling the playing field? Exploring the merits of the ethics-as-process approach for judging qualitative research proposals. Qualitative Health Research. 12(7): 1000–1010.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibl id="bib9" idref="ref37" type="bt">9</bibl> <bibtext> Dingwall R. (2008). The ethical case against ethical regulation in humanities and social science research. Twenty-First Century Society. 3(1): 1–12.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Doyle E, Buckley P. (2017). Embracing qualitative research: A visual model for nuanced research ethics oversight. Qualitative Research. 17(1): 95–117.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Ferretti A, Ienca M, Velarde MR, et al. (2022). The challenges of big data for research ethics committees: A qualitative Swiss study. Journal of Empirical Ressearch on Human Research Ethics. 17: 129–143.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Gillam L, Guillemin M, Bolitho A, et al. (2009). Human research ethics in practice. Monash Bioethics Review. 28(1): 34–50.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Glaser BG, Strauss AL. (1967). The Discovery of Grounded Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research. Chicago, IL: Aldine.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Guillemin M, Gillam L. (2004). Ethics, reflexivity, and "ethically important moments" in research. Qualitative Inquiry. 10(2): 261–280.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Guillemin M, Gillam L, Rosenthal D, et al. (2012). Human RECs: examining their roles and practices. Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics. 7(3): 38–49.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Haggerty KD. (2004). Ethics creep: governing social science research in the name of ethics. Qualitative Sociology. 27(4): 391–414.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Hopf C. (2004) Research ethics and qualitative research. In: Flick U, von Kardorff E, Steinke I (eds) A Companion to Qualitative Research. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 334–339.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Israel M. (2015). Research Ethics and Integrity for Social Scientists. Beyond Regulatory Compliance. London: Sage Publications.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Jennings S. (2012). Response to Schrag: What are ethics committees for anyway? A defence of social science research ethics review. Research Ethics. 8(2): 87–96.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Johansen MB, Frederiksen JT. (2021). Ethically important moments – A pragmatic-dualist research ethics. Journal of Academic Ethics. 19(2): 279–289.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> McCormack D, Carr T, McCloskey R, et al. (2012). Getting through ethics: The fit between research ethics board assessments and qualitative research. Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics. 7(5): 30–36.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> McMurphy S, Lewis J, Boulos P. (2013). Extending the olive branch. Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics. 8(4): 29–36.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Murphy E, Dingwall R. (2007). Informed consent, anticipatory regulation and ethnographic practice. Social Science & Medicine (1967). 65(11): 2223–2234.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Øye C, Bjelland AK, Skorpen A. (2007). Doing participant observation in a psychiatric hospital – research ethics resumed. Social Science & Medicine (1967) 65(11): 2296–2306.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Øye C, Sørensen NØ, Glasdam S. (2016). Qualitative research ethics on the spot: not only on the desktop. Nursing Ethics. 23(4): 455–464.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Pollock K. (2012). Procedure versus process: Ethical paradigms and the conduct of qualitative research. BMC Medical Ethics. 13(1): 25.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Potthoff S, Hempeler C, Gather J, et al. (2023). Research ethics in practice: An analysis of ethical issues encountered in qualitative health research with mental health service users and relatives. Medicine, Health Care, and Philosophy. Epub ahead of print 28 August 2023. DOI: 10.1007/s11019-023-10169-5</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> RatSWD: Rat Für Sozial-Und Wirtschaftsdaten (German Data Forum). (2017). Forschungsethische Grundsätze und Prüfverfahren in den Sozial- und Wirtschaftswissenschaften. Konsort SWD. Output 9, 5. Berufungsperiode. Available at: https://<ulink href="http://www.konsortswd.de/wpcontent/uploads/RatSWD%5fOutput9%5fForschungsethik.pdf">www.konsortswd.de/wpcontent/uploads/RatSWD%5fOutput9%5fForschungsethik.pdf</ulink></bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Reid AM, Brown JM, Smith JM, et al. (2018). Ethical dilemmas and reflexivity in qualitative research. Perspectives on Medical Education. 7(2): 69–75.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Sellers C, Samuel G, Derrick G. (2020). Reasoning 'Uncharted Territory': Notions of expertise within ethics review panels assessing research use of social media. Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics. 15(1-2): 28–39.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Stevenson FA, Gibson W, Pelletier C, et al. (2015). Reconsidering 'ethics' and 'quality' in healthcare research: The case for an iterative ethical paradigm. BMC Medical Ethics. 16(1): 21.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Strauss AL, Corbin J. (1990). Basis of Qualitative Research. Grounded Theory Procedures and Techniques. Thousand Oaks: Sage.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Taylor J, Patterson M. (2020). Autonomy and compliance: How qualitative sociologists respond to Institutional Ethical Oversight. Qualitative Sociology, 33161–183.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Thompson AR, Harper D. (2012) Introduction. In: Harper D, Thompson AR (eds) Qualitative Research Methods in Mental Health and Psychotherapy. A Guide for Students and Practitioners. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, 1–9.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Thompson AR, Russo K. (2012). Ethical dilemmas for clinical psychologists in conducting qualitative research. Qualitative Research in Psychology. 9(1): 32–46.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Tilley SA, Powick-Kumar KD, Ratković S. (2009). Regulatory practices and school-based research: making sense of research ethics/review. Forum: Qualitative Social Research. 10(2): 32.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Tolich M, Tumilty E. (2020). Practicing ethics and ethics praxis. The Qualitative Report. 25(13): 16–30.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Van Den Hoonaard WC. (2011). The Seduction of Ethics. Transforming the Social Sciences. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Van Den Hoonaard WC, Hamilton A. (2016). The Ethics Rupture. Exploring Alternatives to Formal Research-Ethics Review. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Von Unger H. (2021). Ethical reflexivity as research practice. Historical Social Research. 46(2): 186–204.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Von Unger H, Dilger H, Schönhuth M. (2016). Ethics reviews in the social and cultural sciences? A sociological and anthropological contribution to the debate. Forum: Qualitative Social Research. 17(3). Available at: https://<ulink href="http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/2719">www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/2719</ulink></bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Wassenaar DR, Mamotte N. (2012) Ethical issues and ethics reviews in social science research. In: Ferrero A, Korkut Y, Leach MM, et al (eds) The Oxford Handbook of International Psychological Ethics. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 268–282.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Witzel A. (2000). The problem-centered interview. Forum: Qualitative Social Research. 1(1). Available at: https://<ulink href="http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/1132">www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/1132</ulink></bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> World Medical Association. (2013). World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki: ethical principles for medical research involving human subjects. Journal of the American Medical Association. 310(20): 2191–2194.</bibtext> </blist> </ref> <ref id="AN0176610733-25"> <title> Footnotes </title> <blist> <bibtext> We cannot share research data publicly as individual privacy could be compromised, but research data are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> All articles in Research Ethics are published as open access. There are no submission charges and no Article Processing Charges as these are fully funded by institutions through Knowledge Unlatched, resulting in no direct charge to authors. For more information about Knowledge Unlatched please see here: <ulink href="http://www.knowledgeunlatched.org">http://www.knowledgeunlatched.org</ulink> This research is supported by a FoRUM grant from the Medical Faculty of the Ruhr University Bochum (grant number F982-2020).</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> The study has received ethics approval from the Ethics Committee of the Medical Faculty of the Ruhr University Bochum, Germany, on 4 February 2021, registration no. 20-7133. All participants provided written informed consent prior to enrolment in the study.</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext> Sarah Potthoff</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext>Graph</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext>https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0434-8218 Matthé Scholten</bibtext> </blist> <blist> <bibtext>Graph https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8000-8974</bibtext> </blist> </ref> <aug> <p>By Sarah Potthoff; Fee Roth and Matthé Scholten</p> <p>Reported by Author; Author; Author</p> </aug> <nolink nlid="nl1" bibid="bib44" firstref="ref1"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl2" bibid="bib12" firstref="ref4"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl3" bibid="bib14" firstref="ref5"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl4" bibid="bib16" firstref="ref6"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl5" bibid="bib29" firstref="ref7"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl6" bibid="bib31" firstref="ref8"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl7" bibid="bib17" firstref="ref9"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl8" bibid="bib28" firstref="ref10"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl9" bibid="bib41" firstref="ref11"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl10" bibid="bib20" firstref="ref14"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl11" bibid="bib37" firstref="ref16"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl12" bibid="bib40" firstref="ref17"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl13" bibid="bib15" firstref="ref19"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl14" bibid="bib18" firstref="ref20"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl15" bibid="bib26" firstref="ref21"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl16" bibid="bib38" firstref="ref23"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl17" bibid="bib39" firstref="ref24"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl18" bibid="bib21" firstref="ref28"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl19" bibid="bib34" firstref="ref30"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl20" bibid="bib35" firstref="ref31"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl21" bibid="bib36" firstref="ref32"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl22" bibid="bib25" firstref="ref34"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl23" bibid="bib23" firstref="ref39"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl24" bibid="bib24" firstref="ref42"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl25" bibid="bib10" firstref="ref43"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl26" bibid="bib22" firstref="ref51"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl27" bibid="bib19" firstref="ref53"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl28" bibid="bib27" firstref="ref54"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl29" bibid="bib42" firstref="ref55"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl30" bibid="bib32" firstref="ref56"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl31" bibid="bib13" firstref="ref57"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl32" bibid="bib43" firstref="ref58"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl33" bibid="bib11" firstref="ref63"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl34" bibid="bib30" firstref="ref64"></nolink> <nolink nlid="nl35" bibid="bib33" firstref="ref67"></nolink>
Header DbId: eric
DbLabel: ERIC
An: EJ1420975
AccessLevel: 3
PubType: Academic Journal
PubTypeId: academicJournal
PreciseRelevancyScore: 0
IllustrationInfo
Items – Name: Title
  Label: Title
  Group: Ti
  Data: Qualitative Health Research and Procedural Ethics: An Interview Study to Investigate Researchers' Ways of Navigating the Demands of Medical Research Ethics Committees in Germany
– Name: Language
  Label: Language
  Group: Lang
  Data: English
– Name: Author
  Label: Authors
  Group: Au
  Data: <searchLink fieldCode="AR" term="%22Sarah+Potthoff%22">Sarah Potthoff</searchLink> (ORCID <externalLink term="https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0434-8218">0000-0003-0434-8218</externalLink>)<br /><searchLink fieldCode="AR" term="%22Fee+Roth%22">Fee Roth</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="AR" term="%22Matthé+Scholten%22">Matthé Scholten</searchLink> (ORCID <externalLink term="https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8000-8974">0000-0001-8000-8974</externalLink>)
– Name: TitleSource
  Label: Source
  Group: Src
  Data: <searchLink fieldCode="SO" term="%22Research+Ethics%22"><i>Research Ethics</i></searchLink>. 2024 20(2):388-410.
– Name: Avail
  Label: Availability
  Group: Avail
  Data: SAGE Publications. 2455 Teller Road, Thousand Oaks, CA 91320. Tel: 800-818-7243; Tel: 805-499-9774; Fax: 800-583-2665; e-mail: journals@sagepub.com; Web site: https://sagepub.com
– Name: PeerReviewed
  Label: Peer Reviewed
  Group: SrcInfo
  Data: Y
– Name: Pages
  Label: Page Count
  Group: Src
  Data: 23
– Name: DatePubCY
  Label: Publication Date
  Group: Date
  Data: 2024
– Name: TypeDocument
  Label: Document Type
  Group: TypDoc
  Data: Journal Articles<br />Reports - Research
– Name: Subject
  Label: Descriptors
  Group: Su
  Data: <searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Medical+Research%22">Medical Research</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Health%22">Health</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Qualitative+Research%22">Qualitative Research</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Ethics%22">Ethics</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Researchers%22">Researchers</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Research+Committees%22">Research Committees</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Foreign+Countries%22">Foreign Countries</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Epistemology%22">Epistemology</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Research+Methodology%22">Research Methodology</searchLink>
– Name: Subject
  Label: Geographic Terms
  Group: Su
  Data: <searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Germany%22">Germany</searchLink>
– Name: DOI
  Label: DOI
  Group: ID
  Data: 10.1177/17470161231202135
– Name: ISSN
  Label: ISSN
  Group: ISSN
  Data: 1747-0161<br />2047-6094
– Name: Abstract
  Label: Abstract
  Group: Ab
  Data: This study explores how qualitative health researchers navigate the demands of medical research ethics committees in Germany where qualitative research is subject to approval only when it is conducted in medical contexts. We present the results of a grounded theory study to investigate qualitative health researchers' experiences with procedural ethics and the strategies they adopt to navigate its demands. Our analysis revealed six dimensions of experience and three strategies adopted by researchers to navigate the demands of medical research ethics committees. All participants agreed that research ethics is of high importance in qualitative health research, but strategies to navigate the demands of medical research ethics committees ranged from avoiding, and adapting, to transforming the procedures of ethics review. Based on our findings, we provide recommendations for improving the ethics review of qualitative health research.
– Name: AbstractInfo
  Label: Abstractor
  Group: Ab
  Data: As Provided
– Name: DateEntry
  Label: Entry Date
  Group: Date
  Data: 2024
– Name: AN
  Label: Accession Number
  Group: ID
  Data: EJ1420975
PLink https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&site=eds-live&db=eric&AN=EJ1420975
RecordInfo BibRecord:
  BibEntity:
    Identifiers:
      – Type: doi
        Value: 10.1177/17470161231202135
    Languages:
      – Text: English
    PhysicalDescription:
      Pagination:
        PageCount: 23
        StartPage: 388
    Subjects:
      – SubjectFull: Medical Research
        Type: general
      – SubjectFull: Health
        Type: general
      – SubjectFull: Qualitative Research
        Type: general
      – SubjectFull: Ethics
        Type: general
      – SubjectFull: Researchers
        Type: general
      – SubjectFull: Research Committees
        Type: general
      – SubjectFull: Foreign Countries
        Type: general
      – SubjectFull: Epistemology
        Type: general
      – SubjectFull: Research Methodology
        Type: general
      – SubjectFull: Germany
        Type: general
    Titles:
      – TitleFull: Qualitative Health Research and Procedural Ethics: An Interview Study to Investigate Researchers' Ways of Navigating the Demands of Medical Research Ethics Committees in Germany
        Type: main
  BibRelationships:
    HasContributorRelationships:
      – PersonEntity:
          Name:
            NameFull: Sarah Potthoff
      – PersonEntity:
          Name:
            NameFull: Fee Roth
      – PersonEntity:
          Name:
            NameFull: Matthé Scholten
    IsPartOfRelationships:
      – BibEntity:
          Dates:
            – D: 01
              M: 04
              Type: published
              Y: 2024
          Identifiers:
            – Type: issn-print
              Value: 1747-0161
            – Type: issn-electronic
              Value: 2047-6094
          Numbering:
            – Type: volume
              Value: 20
            – Type: issue
              Value: 2
          Titles:
            – TitleFull: Research Ethics
              Type: main
ResultId 1