Ethical issues in neuroimaging health research:an IPA study with research participants


Autoria(s): Shaw, Rachel L.; Senior, Carl; Peel, Elizabeth A.; Cooke, Richard; Donnelly, Louise S.
Data(s)

01/11/2008

Resumo

Neuroimaging is increasingly used to understand conditions like stroke and epilepsy. However, there is growing recognition that neuroimaging can raise ethical issues. We used interpretative phenomenological analysis to analyse interview data pre-and post-scan to explore these ethical issues. Findings show participants can become anxious prior to scanning and the protocol for managing incidental findings is unclear. Participants lacked a frame of reference to contextualize their expectations and often drew on medical narratives. Recommendations to reduce anxiety include dialogue between researcher and participant to clarify understanding during consent and the use of a `virtual tour' of the neuroimaging experience.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/16617/1/Shaw_et_al_JHP_2008_13_1051-1059.pdf

Shaw, Rachel L.; Senior, Carl; Peel, Elizabeth A.; Cooke, Richard and Donnelly, Louise S. (2008). Ethical issues in neuroimaging health research:an IPA study with research participants. Journal of Health Psychology, 13 (8), pp. 1051-1059.

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/16617/

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed