Research Ethics

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Across
  1. 6. Guidelines developed to lead and direct research so that little or no harm occurs to research subjects (and researchers)
  2. 7. Informing potential subjects about participation (benefits and risk) and securing consent before the study begins
  3. 9. Bureaucracies, often in universities and government agencies, created to oversee the ethical standards and ensured and necessary steps are taken to reduce the risk to research participants.
  4. 10. The process of knowing the identity of a research subject but keeping it private. It involves taking the necessary steps to protect participants’ identities from each other
  5. 11. Evaluated the ethical issues of experiments in WW2 and helped develop legal statues to protect human subjects
Down
  1. 1. Means that every participant has the right to refuse to be a part of a research study. Participants must agree to participate
  2. 2. Researchers need to take necessary steps to reduce the possibility of harm to their research participants
  3. 3. Principles designed to govern the practices of researchers and to assure accountability
  4. 4. One of the first comprehensive guides and recommendations for protecting subjects of research
  5. 5. The status of not being identified. Research participants have the right for their identities not to be revealed.
  6. 8. The process of tricking or misleading a subject for the purpose of research