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web007 | 1 year ago
"We" decided that Tuskegee was bad enough that it should be stopped before harm is done, and that there is no appropriate or sufficient "punish[ment] in retrospect" for the fallout.
The government makes you get a license to drive at all, then "drive a Pinto" versus "drive a Trabant" are similar enough that they don't require more info. They require you to get different licensure to drive a bigger truck where you could potentially cause more harm, or to drive an airplane. In this analogy the IRB is the DMV/FAA/whatever, and you're asking for permission to drive a tank, a motorized unicycle, a helicopter, an 18-wheeler or a stealth fighter. You don't get a Science License rubber stamp because that's like getting a Vehicle License - the variation in "Vehicle" is big enough that each type needs review.
jhbadger|1 year ago
The thing is, although you and the linked article seem to be associating IRB approval just with human studies, these days you need it for mouse studies.
billjive|1 year ago
[1] example: https://animalcare.umich.edu/institutional-animal-care-use-c...
unknown|1 year ago
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scarmig|1 year ago
nxobject|1 year ago
(I guess the point of analogies like these are to force us to sweat the details and examples.)
nxobject|1 year ago
There are escape hatches, too: I doubt many rural Alaskan pilots worry (or need to worry) about these things.
xyzzyz|1 year ago
spondylosaurus|1 year ago
A driver's license is more like a medical license than IRB approval.
xyzzyz|1 year ago
If your point is that we could replace IRBs with some sort of a researcher license, that you need to obtain before being able to do studies that today require IRB approval, then I support it, because while not ideal, it improves over the status quo.