A REVIEW OF THE TWO-TIERED 1RB REVIEW SYSTEM FOR DOD SPONSORED, FEDERALLY FUNDED RESEARCH: ARE TWO TIERS ONE TIER TOO MANY?
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Date
2003
Type of Work
Department
Hood College Biology
Program
Biomedical and Environmental Science
Citation of Original Publication
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Abstract
Essential to the conduct of research is the protection of the research participant. Beginning
with the Nuremberg Code, regulations have been created for just this purpose. These regulations
require that federally funded research involving the use of human subjects be reviewed on a local
level by an institutional review board (IRB). Some of the human subjects research that is
sponsored by the Department of Defense (DoD) and funded by the U. S. Army Medical Research
and Materiel Command is required to undergo a second level of review by The Surgeon
General's Human Subjects Research Review Board (HSRRB). This second level review adds
additional time onto the approval cycle before research can be implemented. Some researchers
feel that this second level review is unnecessary as the current regulations and local Institutional
Review Boards (IRB) provide adequate protection for the research subject. The objective of this
project is to attempt to address this concern of the research community. To meet this objective, a
subset of locally approved greater than minimal risk (GTMR) protocols submitted for second
level review by the U.S. Army Surgeon General's HSRRB during 1999, 2000, and 2001 was
assessed for compliance with Federal human subject protection regulations, 45 CFR 46, 32 CFR
219, 21 CFR 50 and 56. Following this compliance review, the minutes from the review
conducted by the HSRRB were examined to determine the deficiencies, if any, that were
identified during the second level review.