Across
- 6. Guidelines developed to lead and direct research so that little or no harm occurs to research subjects (and researchers)
- 7. Informing potential subjects about participation (benefits and risk) and securing consent before the study begins
- 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.
- 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
- 11. Evaluated the ethical issues of experiments in WW2 and helped develop legal statues to protect human subjects
Down
- 1. Means that every participant has the right to refuse to be a part of a research study. Participants must agree to participate
- 2. Researchers need to take necessary steps to reduce the possibility of harm to their research participants
- 3. Principles designed to govern the practices of researchers and to assure accountability
- 4. One of the first comprehensive guides and recommendations for protecting subjects of research
- 5. The status of not being identified. Research participants have the right for their identities not to be revealed.
- 8. The process of tricking or misleading a subject for the purpose of research
