Ohio Administrative Code
Title 4757 - Counselor, Social Worker, and Marriage and Family Therapist Board
Chapter 4757-5 - Code of Ethics
Section 4757-5-07 - Standards of ethical practice and professional conduct: research and publication
Universal Citation: OH Admin Code 4757-5-07
Current through all regulations passed and filed through September 16, 2024
(A) Responsibilities in conducting research:
(1)
Use of human subjects: Licensees
and registrants shall plan, design, conduct, and report research in a
manner consistent with pertinent ethical principles, federal and state laws,
host institutional regulations, and scientific standards governing research
with human subjects. Licensees and
registrants shall design and conduct research that reflects cultural
sensitivity appropriateness.
(2)
Deviation from standard practices: Licensees and registrants shall seek consultation and
observe stringent safeguards to protect the rights of research participants
when a research problem suggests a deviation from standard acceptable
practices.
(3) Precautions to avoid
injury: Licensees and
registrants who conduct research with human subjects are responsible for
the subjects' welfare throughout the experiment and shall take reasonable
precautions to avoid causing injurious psychological, physical, or social
effects to their subjects. Licensees and registrants shall warn clients of any
possible harm that might come from being involved in a research
project.
(4) Principal researcher
responsibility: The ultimate responsibility for ethical research practice lies
with the principal researcher. All others involved in the research activities
share ethical obligations and full responsibility for their own
actions.
(5) Minimal interference:
Licensees and registrants
shall take reasonable precautions to avoid causing disruptions in subjects'
lives due to participation in research.
(6) Diversity: Licensees and registrants
shall be sensitive to diversity and research issues.
(B) Informed consent in conducting research and publishing:
(1) Topics disclosed: In
obtaining informed consent for research, licensees and registrants shall use language that is
understandable to research participants and that:
(a) Accurately explain the purpose and
procedures to be followed;
(b)
Identify any procedures that are experimental or relatively untried;
(c) Describe the attendant discomforts and
risks;
(d) Describe the benefits or
changes in individuals or organizations that might be reasonably
expected;
(e) Disclose appropriate
alternative procedures that would be advantageous for subject:
(f) Offer to answer any inquiries concerning
the procedures;
(g) Ascribe any
limitations on confidentiality, and;
(h) Instruct that subjects are free to
withdraw their consent and discontinue participation in the project at any
time.
(2) Deception:
Licensees and registrants
shall not conduct research involving deception unless alternative procedures
are not feasible and the prospective value of the research justifies the
deception. When the methodological requirements of a study necessitate
concealment or deception, the investigator shall explain clearly the reasons
for this action as soon as possible.
(3) Voluntary participation:
Licensees and registrants
shall ensure that participation in research is voluntary and without any
penalty for refusal to participate. Involuntary participation shall be
appropriate only when investigators can demonstrate that participation shall
have no harmful effects on subjects and is essential to the
investigation.
(4) Confidentiality
of information: Licensees and
registrants shall be responsible for ensuring information obtained about
research participants during the course of an investigation is confidential.
When the possibility exists that others may obtain access to such information,
ethical research practice requires that the possibility, together with the
plans for protecting confidentiality, shall be explained to participants as a
part of the procedure for obtaining informed consent.
(5) Persons incapable of giving informed
consent: When a person is not capable of giving informed consent, counselors,
social workers and marriage and family therapists shall provide an appropriate
explanation, obtain agreement for participation and obtain appropriate consent
from a legally authorized person.
(6) Commitments to participants:
Licensees and registrants
shall take reasonable measures to honor all commitments to research
participants.
(7) Explanations
after data collections: After data is collected, licensees and registrants
shall provide participants with full clarifications of the nature of the study
to remove any misconceptions. Where scientific or human values justify delaying
or withholding information, counselors, social workers and marriage and family
therapists shall take reasonable measures to avoid causing harm.
(8) Agreements to cooperate:
Licensees and registrants who
agree to cooperate with another individual in research or publication incur an
obligation to cooperate as promised in terms of punctuality of performance and
with regard to the completeness and accuracy of the information
required.
(9) Informed consent for
sponsors: In the pursuit of research, licensees and registrants shall give sponsors,
institutions, and publication channels the same respect and opportunity for
giving informed consent that they accord to individual research participants.
Licensees and registrants
shall be aware of their obligation to future research workers and ensure that
host institutions are given feedback information and proper
acknowledgment.
(C) Reporting results of research and publishing:
(1) Information affecting outcome: When
reporting research results, licensees and registrants shall explicitly mention all
variables and conditions known to the investigator that may have affected the
outcome of a study or the interpretation of this data.
(2) Accurate results:
Licensees and registrants
shall plan, conduct and report research accurately and in a manner that
minimizes the possibility that results will be misleading. They shall provide
thorough discussions of the limitations of their data and alternative
hypotheses. Licensees and
registrants shall not engage in fraudulent research, distort data,
misrepresent data, or deliberately bias their results.
(3) Obligation to report unfavorable results:
Licensees and registrants
shall communicate to other licensees and registrants the results of any research
judged to be of professional value. Results that reflect unfavorably on
institutions, programs, services, prevailing opinions, or vested interests
shall not be withheld.
(4) Identity
of subjects: Licensees and
registrants who supply data, aid in the research of another person,
report research results, or make original data available shall take due care to
disguise the identity of respective subjects in the absence of specific
authorization from the subjects to do otherwise.
(5) Replication studies:
Licensees and registrants
shall make available sufficient original research data to qualified
professionals who may wish to replicate the study.
(D) Publication of research results:
(1) Recognition of others: When conducting
and reporting research, licensees
and registrants shall be familiar with, and give recognition to, previous
work on the topic, observe copyright laws, and give full credit to those to
whom credit is due.
(2)
Contributors: Licensees and
registrants shall give credit through joint authorship, acknowledgment,
footnote statements, or other appropriate means to those who have contributed
significantly to research or concept development in accordance with such
contributions. The principal contributor shall be listed first and minor
technical or professional contributions shall be acknowledged in notes or
introductory statements.
(3)
Student research: For an article that is substantially based on a student's
dissertation or thesis, the student shall be listed as the principal
author.
(4) Duplicate submission:
Licensees and registrants
shall submit manuscripts for consideration to only one journal at a time.
Manuscripts that are published in whole or in substantial part in another
journal or published work shall not be submitted for publication without
acknowledgment and permission from the previous publication.
(5) Professional review:
Licensees and registrants who
review material submitted for publication, research, or other scholarly
purposes shall respect the confidentiality and proprietary rights of those who
submitted it.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Ohio may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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