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Online Training 2016 - Assessing risk in human research protocols - By AtoZ Compliance

Date2016-03-29

Deadline2016-03-29

VenueOnline Training, USA - United States USA - United States

KeywordsHuman Research Protection; Risk management training; Risk management process

Websitehttps://bit.ly/1RSLrdK

Topics/Call fo Papers

Key Take Away
Assessing risk in human research protocols can help you put protections in place that would reduce the level of risk and provide greater flexibility in areas like mode of review, consent, or data safety monitoring.
Overview
Risk assessment is the process by which an IRB determines whether a study is minimal or greater than minimal risk for human research protection. The level of risk assigned a research protocol affects other determinations in a given study.
45 CFR 46.111 (a)(2) states, “In evaluating risks and benefits, the IRB should consider only those risks and benefits that may result from the research (as distinguished from risks and benefits of therapies subjects would receive even if not participating in the research).”
Why Should You Attend
How the study is designed can minimize potential risks to participants. Studies that are deemed “minimal risk” have greater options when it comes to using an expedited review system and options for consent. Risk management training rating also affects how elaborate a data safety monitoring plan will be required and measures put in place to protect privacy for the individuals and confidentiality of the data. The more that is done to reduce or minimize potential risks to research participants, the fewer regulatory requirements there are reducing burdens on the researchers and their teams. Attending this webinar will give you insight into research studies are assigned a risk rating, what that risk rating means, and what you can do to minimize risks to participants.
Areas Covered In This Webinar
All researchers want their studies be reviewed and approved quickly. Risks in the study can slow the process as the level of risk assigned a research protocol affects: mode of review, whether or not additional approvals outside of the IRB are needed, additional protections put in place, frequency of review, consent requirements, negotiation of indemnification language and several other factors.
Understanding how risk levels are assigned and making preliminary determinations when designing the study can help you put protections in place that would reduce the level of risk that could provide greater flexibility in areas of your protocol such as mode of review, consent, or data safety monitoring.
Learning Objectives
What is risk assessment?
Why is risk management process important?
How can you make preliminary risk assessments?
What does risk assessment affect?
What are some methods of reducing risks in a research study?
Who Will Benefit
Principal Investigators / Sub-investigators
Clinical Research Scientists (PKs, Biostatisticians)
Safety Nurses
Clinical Research Associates (CRAs)
Clinical Research Coordinators (CRCs)
Recruiting Staff
QA / QC Auditors and Staff
Clinical Research Data Managers
Human Research Protection Professionals
Speakers Profile
Sarah Fowler-Dixon
Sarah Fowler-Dixon, PhD, CIP is Education Specialist and instructor with Washington University School of Medicine. She has developed a comprehensive education program for human subject research which has served as a model for other institutions. She crafted budgets, policies, procedures, reporting, and training for the new program.
She has initiated the planning, development, authorship and implementation of many human subjects’ research policies, practices, guidelines, submission and reviewer forms often working with state and federal authorities. She has provided consultation regarding ethical, federal, state, and institutional requirements for faculty and staff both in the design and execution of their projects and teaches research ethics and regulatory affairs and the fundamentals of research management to graduate and undergraduate students.
More recently, she led a task force in the development of the Community Engaged Research Program at Washington University. Dr. Fowler-Dixon has simultaneously served as an Independent Consultant, providing expertise and creating supplemental educational materials, including a copyrighted workbook. Prior to joining Washington University, Dr. Fowler-Dixon was the Educational Development and Learning Specialist for Saint Louis University serving on various committees to improve research, procedures, community outreach, and retention.
For more detail please click on this below link:
http://bit.ly/1RSLrdK
Email: referrals-AT-atozcompliance.com
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Tel: +1-516-900-5509

Last modified: 2016-02-24 18:01:17