Roses and Balances: A Paradigm for Constructive Ethical Review of Health Professions Education Research

Tim Schutte*, Fedde Scheele, Scheltus van Luijk

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journal(Systematic) Review article peer-review

Abstract

Recently, the balance between value and necessity of ethical review of health professions education research has been debated. At present, there are large differences in how ethical review of research proposals for health professions education is organized. We present a framework that describes the organization of ethical review in health professions education research, based on the interpersonal circumplex model, also known as Leary's Rose. The framework is based on the two main balances in ethical review of health professions education research, being the protectiveness for the subjects and how ethical review is organized and responsibilities are shared. The axis/balance of protectiveness ranges between the extremes "paternalistic protective" to "liberal permissive". The axis/balance of organization and responsibility ranges between the extremes of "centralized" to "local/decentralized". This model offers insight in the position of an ethical review board and shows the dynamics of the decisions for ethical approval and the consequences of the different approaches to the organization of ethical review of health professions education research.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)529-535
Number of pages7
JournalAdvances in medical education and practice
Volume12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Keywords

  • ethical review
  • health professions education research
  • ethical approval of health professions education research
  • INTERPERSONAL CIRCUMPLEX

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