Research ethics committees in Africa: authors’ reply
Loading...
Date
2007
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
PLoS Med
Abstract
We  thank  Dr.  Benatar  [1]  for  pointing  out  that  South  Africa  has  two  Fogarty-funded  bioethics training  programs:  one  that  focuses  primarily  on  providing  short-term  training  to  mid-career professionals from Southern Africa; and another that provides modular training in research ethics to  professionals  from  the  African  continent.  In  addition,  there  are  now  several  other  Fogarty-funded trainingprograms that either target African professionals exclusively  or include African professionals,  among  others,  in  their  programs  (see  http:⁄⁄www.fi  c.nih.gov/programs/training grants/bioethics/index.htm).  All  of  these  programs  share  the  goal  of  increasing professional capacity in bioethics and research ethics on the African continent. Our own paper demonstrated that  training  even  a  small  number  of  individuals  can  make  a  difference  in  changing  policy  and practice  regarding  research  ethics  in  several  institutions;  that  so  many  training  efforts  are  now ongoing  is  a  major  step  forward.  Again,  having  more  people  teaching  and  discussing  researchethics  and  starting  and  staffing  research  ethics  committees  will  never  itself  guarantee  that research  with  humans  is  more  ethical,  but  it  seems  to  be  a  critical  first  step.  Capacity development for Africa still remains a challenge and worthy of increasing investments in global health
Description
Keywords
Research, Africa
Citation
Kass, N.E., Hyder, A.A., Ajuwon, A., Appiah-Poku, J., Barsdorf, N., Elsayed, D.E., Mokhachane, M., Mupenda, B., Ndebele, P., Ndossi, G. and Sikateyo, B., 2007. Research ethics committees in Africa: Authors' reply. PLoS Med, 4(3), p.e136.