Department of Psychiatry, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.
Prehosp Disaster Med. 2009 Jul-Aug;24 Suppl 2:s217-27. doi: 10.1017/s1049023x00021622.
The Working Group on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support was convened as part of the 2009 Harvard Humanitarian Action Summit. The Working Group chose to focus on ethical issues in mental health and psychosocial research and programming in humanitarian settings. The Working Group built on previous work and recommendations, such as the Inter-Agency Standing Committee's Guidelines on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings.
The objective of this working group was to address one of the factors contributing to the deficiency of research and the need to develop the evidence base on mental health and psychosocial support interventions during complex emergencies by proposing ethical research guidelines. Outcomes research is vital for effective program development in emergency settings, but to date, no comprehensive ethical guidelines exist for guiding such research efforts.
Working Group members conducted literature reviews which included peer-reviewed publications, agency reports, and relevant guidelines on the following topics: general ethical principles in research, cross-cultural issues, research in resource-poor countries, and specific populations such as trauma and torture survivors, refugees, minorities, children and youth, and the mentally ill. Working Group members also shared key points regarding ethical issues encountered in their own research and fieldwork.
The group adapted a broad definition of the term "research", which encompasses needs assessments and data gathering, as well as monitoring and evaluation. The guidelines are conceptualized as applying to formal and informal processes of assessment and evaluation in which researchers as well as most service providers engage. The group reached consensus that it would be unethical not to conduct research and evaluate outcomes of mental health and psychosocial interventions in emergency settings, given that there currently is very little good evidence base for such interventions. Overarching themes and issues generated by the group for further study and articulation included: purpose and benefits of research, issues of validity, neutrality, risk, subject selection and participation, confidentiality, consent, and dissemination of results.
The group outlined several key topics and recommendations that address ethical issues in conducting mental health and psychosocial research in humanitarian settings. The group views this set of recommendations as a living document to be further developed and refined based on input from colleagues representing different regions of the globe with an emphasis on input from colleagues from low-resource countries.
心理健康和心理社会支持工作组是作为 2009 年哈佛人道主义行动峰会的一部分而召集的。工作组选择将重点放在人道主义环境中的心理健康和心理社会研究和规划中的伦理问题上。工作组借鉴了以前的工作和建议,例如机构间常设委员会关于紧急情况下心理健康和心理社会支持的准则。
该工作组的目标是通过提出伦理研究准则来解决导致复杂紧急情况下心理健康和心理社会支持干预措施的研究不足和需要发展证据基础的因素之一。结果研究对于紧急情况下的有效方案制定至关重要,但迄今为止,没有全面的伦理准则来指导此类研究工作。
工作组的成员对以下主题进行了文献综述,包括同行评议的出版物、机构报告和相关准则:研究中的一般伦理原则、跨文化问题、资源匮乏国家的研究以及特定人群,如创伤和酷刑幸存者、难民、少数民族、儿童和青年以及精神病患者。工作组的成员还分享了他们自己的研究和实地工作中遇到的伦理问题的要点。
该小组对“研究”一词进行了广义的定义,其中包括需求评估和数据收集,以及监测和评估。该准则被构想为适用于研究人员以及大多数服务提供者参与的正式和非正式的评估和评价过程。该小组达成共识,鉴于目前针对此类干预措施的证据基础非常有限,如果不在紧急情况下开展研究并评估心理健康和心理社会干预措施的结果,那将是不道德的。该小组提出了进一步研究和阐述的总主题和问题,包括:研究的目的和益处、有效性、中立性、风险、对象选择和参与、保密性、同意以及结果的传播。
该小组概述了在人道主义环境中进行心理健康和心理社会研究中的几个关键主题和建议,以解决伦理问题。该小组认为,这套建议是一份活的文件,将根据来自全球不同地区的同事的意见进一步制定和完善,重点是来自资源匮乏国家的同事的意见。