Ethical issues and ways of dealing with them

    Cards (5)

    • Conflict - when a conflict exists between the rights of participants and the aims of the research.

      BPS code of conduct is a legal document to protect participants based on four principles: respect, competence, responsibility, and integrity.
      Ethics committees weigh up costs and benefits before deciding whether a study should go ahead.
    • Informed consent - participants should be able to make an informed judgement about whether to take part.

      Too much information may affect participants' behaviour, so different types of consent are used:
      • Presumptive - ask a similar group
      • Prior general - agree to be deceived
      • Retrospective - get consent after the study
    • Deception - deliberately misleading or withholding information so consent is not informed.

      At the end of the study, participants should be given a debrief where they are advised of:
      1. The true aims of the investigation.
      2. Details that were not given during the study.
      3. What their data will be used for.
      4. Their right to withhold data.
    • Protection from harm - participants should be at no risk than they would be in everyday life.
      • Should be given the right to withdraw at each stage of the research process.
      • Should be reassured that their behaviour was typical/normal during the debriefing.
      • Researcher should provide counselling if participants have been distressed.
    • Right to control privacy and confidentiality
      We have the right to control information about ourselves. If this is invaded, confidentiality should be respected.
      • If personal details are held these must be protected. Usually, though, no personal details are recorded.
      • Researchers refer to participants using numbers, initials, or false names.
      • Participants' personal data cannot be shared with other researchers.