RESEARCH, COMMUNITY AND ETHICS COMMITTEE NEED ONGOING SCIENCE LITERACY

Participants at the 2017 Bioethics conference that held on the 13th and 14th of December 2017 at Rockview Hotel Abuja identified the need for researchers, community members and ethics committee members to have ongoing science literacy to be able to contribute meaningfully to the research process. How do we promote ongoing research literacy for all members of the ethics committee? How do we ensure that researchers also continue to build their competency around research and ethics literacy? Is there a need to remunerate ethics committee members for their services?

COMMUNITY VOICES ARE POWERFUL

During the 2017 Bioethics conference that held on the 13th and 14th of December 2017 at Rockview Hotel Abuja, contributions from the audience raised a critically important point. They noted that community voices can change ethical and legal standards. It is therefore not appropriate to push on communities, ‘a’ considered ethical and legal standard. It is important that standards for a research are defined through consultation with community members rather than being legal about the application of rules and standards for the conduct of a research.

WHAT DO WE NEED TO ADVOCATE FOR IN RESEARCH

Dr Bridget Haire highlighted the need to advocate with and for the research participants 2017 Bioethics conference that held on the 13th and 14th of December 2017 at Rockview Hotel Abuja. She identified that the law is the minimum standard required of research. Ethics require much higher standards than the law. We all need to ensure those high ethical standards are kept for the welfare of research participants. We all have to speak up and safeguard not only their public health interest but their human rights. She also noted that access to health care can be facilitated through research in many parts of the world. However some legal barriers limit some of these access especially for adolescents (adolescents often need to receive consent from their parents before research participation and service access).

AFRICA NEEDS TO TAKE ITS DESTINY IN ITS HANDS

One of the major outcomes of the discussion that came up at the 2017 Bioethics conference that held on the 13th and 14th of December 2017 at Rockview Hotel Abuja was the need for African government to start to fund research. Without government funding research, large scale research funded by donors will continue to drive disparity in capacity of the North and the South. Those donor funds will not resolve the local health care problems. Only then can we try to strike a balance between our social values and the economies of health that is respectful of local cultures and local needs.

SHARE ETHICAL RESPONSIBILITY TO ENSURE AN ETHICAL SYSTEM

At the 2017 Bioethics conference, Dr Kristin Perterson of the University of California, Irvine discussed extensively on how the drive for financial gains by the pharmaceutical industry had led to many unscrupulous practices in the pharmaceutical industry. The entire industry is fragmented at multiple points with potential for unethical practices at many of these points. Focusing on the ethical review of research protocols is one of the many multiple points of the entire enterprise where unethical practices is possible. It is therefore important to share ethical responsibility for all the segment of the pharmaceutical research enterprise to be able to develop an ethical system. The siloing of the research process is sadly one of the ways of promoting unethical structures. In Africa, we should look towards health systems strengthening as a way to facilitate translation of research to health outcomes and reduce the siloed process.

Community Networking Village (PWUDs Zone):90-90-90 Not Without PWUDs – Eghaghe James

 

There was a community networking zone dedicated for people who use drugs during the 2017 ICASA conference. The zone was operational between the 5th and 9th of December at the community village. Discussants at the meeting identified the lack of willingness on the path of government to support the most essential components of effective harm reduction programmes which are NSP and OST; the hindrance criminalization and untailored regulatory framework of governments in Africa has on the progress made with harm reduction despite several advocacy on the gains; and the standard of care for PWIDs infected with tuberculosis, hepatitis B&C and HIV. Discussants also highlighted ways to improve specific harm reduction services for women who use drugs. This include community members in community home-based support services as this also improves data accuracy for informed programming. To improve the image of the community of drug users, it was important for the community to safe-guard itself and not harbour criminals in the community. Colleagues from East and West Africa enjoined Nigeria to take the bull by the horn by embracing essential life-saving services under  Harm reduction interventions.