Supplementing research ethics training in psychiatry residents: A five-tier approach

•We developed a new research ethics training module for psychiatry residents.•The Five-Tier Approach has interactive modules with assessments of learning.•Twenty-five first year psychiatry residents of an academic psychiatric training centre participated.•Understanding regarding certain areas – auto...

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Veröffentlicht in:Asian journal of psychiatry 2018-04, Vol.34, p.54-56
Hauptverfasser: Viswanath, Biju, Jayarajan, Rajan Nishanth, Chandra, Prabha S., Chaturvedi, Santosh K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We developed a new research ethics training module for psychiatry residents.•The Five-Tier Approach has interactive modules with assessments of learning.•Twenty-five first year psychiatry residents of an academic psychiatric training centre participated.•Understanding regarding certain areas – autonomy, benefits and justice was initially inadequate.•In the final step, all ethical aspects were understood by the students. Ethics training is a key step in the research supervision of psychiatry trainees and there is need for a structured educational module. We developed a new research ethics training module for psychiatry residents – The Five-Tier Approach. Twenty-five first year psychiatry residents of an academic psychiatric training centre in India participated in this multi-session workshop. Module 1 included the completion of NIH online certification course for research ethics training. Module 2 was a one-hour interactive group discussion on ethical principles in research. Module 3 was a two-hour session consisting of case-based group discussion of nine selected research vignettes. Module 4 involved preparation of an informed consent form. Module 5 was a mock ethics committee role-played by seven students while the larger group observed using a Fish Bowl technique and provided feedback. Assessments were done during the third and final modules. During the third module, understanding regarding certain areas – autonomy, benefits and justice was found to be inadequate. In the final step, all ethical aspects were covered by the students. This five-tier approach seems like a superior tool for research ethics training in academic institutions, especially in Southeast Asia, where the student-teacher ratios are generally very high.
ISSN:1876-2018
1876-2026
DOI:10.1016/j.ajp.2018.04.003