-Mahesh Devnani
The October issue of Health Affairs contain seven articles on ‘Quality of health care in India’1-7.
One of them is a commentary1, two are based on secondary data2-3
and 4 studies involve human subjects4-7. This is a welcome step
which would hopefully strengthen the discussion on quality in Indian healthcare
sector.
However, out of the 4 studies
involving human subjects, Mohanan et al7 is silent on any review
board or ethical approvals taken for the study, and only 2 studies5-6
partially mention about participant’s consent whereas the other two studies4,7
are completely silent on this important aspect of research involving human
subjects. Two studies2-3 based on secondary data do not mention if
the studies were exempted from review/ethical board approval (Table 1).
Table 1:
Review board/ethical approval and consent
Article
|
Involvement
of human subjects
|
Mentions
about Review Board /Ethical approval or exemption
|
Whether
the consent was taken from participants in local language
|
Mohanan et al7
|
Yes
|
No
|
No
mention
|
Das et al4
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
No
mention
|
Babiarz et al5
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Mentions that
consent was not needed for DLHS-3 data, but nothing mentioned about consent in
household survey conducted in Gujarat
|
Le et al6
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Mentions that patients
were excluded from study if they were unable to provide consent
|
Munshi et al2
|
No
|
No
|
N.A.
|
Morton et al3
|
No
|
No
|
N.A.
|
Explicit communication of review
board approvals and informed consent is an important aspect of research publication
involving human subjects8-9 and it is surprising that editorial and
peer review process of Health Affairs overlooked this aspect. International
agencies and researchers have long been allegedly accused of unethical research
practices involving poor people of developing countries10, hence
suo moto communication of review board approvals and methodology of obtaining
informed consent becomes more important while publishing such studies.
While it is heartening to see a
cluster of articles on quality of care in India, it is expected that the commonly accepted norms
of ethical research publication are also followed.
Notes
- Mohanan M, Hay K, Mor N. Quality of health care in india: challenges, priorities, and the road ahead. Health Aff (Millwood) 2016;35:1753-8.
- Munshi V, Yamey G, Verguet S. Trends in state-level child mortality, maternal mortality, and fertility rates in India. Health Aff (Millwood) 2016;35:1759-63.
- Morton M, Nagpal S, Sadanandan R, Bauhoff S. India's largest hospital insurance program faces challenges in using claims data to measure quality. Health Aff (Millwood) 2016;35:1792-9.
- Das J, Mohpal A. Socioeconomic status and quality of care in rural India: New evidence from provider and household surveys. Health Aff (Millwood) 2016;35:1764-73.
- Babiarz KS, Mahadevan SV, Divi N, Miller G. Ambulance service associated with reduced probabilities of neonatal and infant mortality in two Indian states. Health Aff (Millwood) 2016;35:1774-82.
- Le HG, Ehrlich JR, Venkatesh R, Srinivasan A, Kolli A, Haripriya A, et al. A sustainable model for delivering high-quality, efficient cataract surgery in southern India. Health Aff (Millwood) 2016;35:1783-90.
- Mohanan M, Babiarz KS, Goldhaber-Fiebert JD, Miller G, Vera-Hernández M. Effect of a large-scale social franchising and telemedicine program on childhood diarrhea and pneumonia outcomes in India. Health Aff (Millwood) 2016;35:1800-9.
- Taljaard M, McRae AD, Weijer C, Bennett C, Dixon S, Taleban J, et al. Inadequate reporting of research ethics review and informed consent in cluster randomised trials: review of random sample of published trials. BMJ 2011;342:d2496.
- Schroter S, Plowman R, Hutchings A, Gonzalez A. Reporting ethics committee approval and patient consent by study design in five general medical journals. J Med Ethics 2006;32:718-23.
- Angell M. The ethics of clinical research in the Third World. N Engl J Med 1997;337:847-9.