Best Practices for Conducting Clinical Trials With Indigenous Children in the United States

Author:

Shaw Jennifer L.1,Semmens Erin1,Okihiro May1,Lewis Johnnye L.1,Hirschfeld Matthew1,VanWagoner Timothy M.1,Stephens Lancer1,Easa David1,Ross Judith L.1,Graham Niki1,Watson Sara E.1,Szyld Edgardo G.1,Dillard Denise A.1,Pyles Lee A.1,Darden Paul M.1,Carlson John C.1,Smith Paul G.1,McCulloh Russell J.1,Snowden Jessica N.1,Adeky Sarah H.1,Singleton Rosalyn1

Affiliation:

1. Jennifer L. Shaw and Denise A. Dillard are with the Southcentral Foundation Research Department, Anchorage, AK. Rosalyn Singleton is with the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium, Anchorage. May Okihiro and David Easa are with the University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu. Erin Semmens, Paul G. Smith, and Niki Graham are with the University of Montana, Missoula. Johnnye L. Lewis is with the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, Albuquerque. Matthew Hirschfeld is with the Alaska Native Medical...

Abstract

We provide guidance for conducting clinical trials with Indigenous children in the United States. We drew on extant literature and our experience to describe 3 best practices for the ethical and effective conduct of clinical trials with Indigenous children. Case examples of pediatric research conducted with American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian communities are provided to illustrate these practices. Ethical and effective clinical trials with Indigenous children require early and sustained community engagement, building capacity for Indigenous research, and supporting community oversight and ownership of research. Effective engagement requires equity, trust, shared interests, and mutual benefit among partners over time. Capacity building should prioritize developing Indigenous researchers. Supporting community oversight and ownership of research means that investigators should plan for data-sharing agreements, return or destruction of data, and multiple regulatory approvals. Indigenous children must be included in clinical trials to reduce health disparities and improve health outcomes in these pediatric populations. Establishment of the Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes Institutional Development Award States Pediatric Clinical Trials Network (ECHO ISPCTN) in 2016 creates a unique and timely opportunity to increase Indigenous children’s participation in state-of-the-art clinical trials.

Publisher

American Public Health Association

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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