Introduction

Academic qualitative research involving human participants must protect participants’ rights, welfare, and well-being. Researchers in university environments must navigate detailed Institutional Review Board (IRB) processes to uphold ethical conduct. This article explores core ethical principles, contextualizes IRB review in qualitative research, identifies common challenges, and offers practical guidance for ethically sound study design, data collection, analysis, and reporting.

Core Ethical Principles in Human Subjects Research

The Belmont Report established the foundational principles that guide IRBs and ethical research broadly. The three foundational principles are:

  1. Respect for Persons: Acknowledging autonomy and requiring informed consent for capable individuals, with added protection for vulnerable populations.
  2. Beneficence: Promoting welfare by minimizing risks and maximizing benefits to participants.
  3. Justice: Ensuring fair selection and avoiding exploitation or overburdening of disadvantaged groups.[1]

IRB Fundamentals for Qualitative Research

An Institutional Review Board (IRB) is a formally constituted committee that reviews research involving human subjects and ensures adherence to ethical standards. Its primary goal is to keep participant harm minimal and ensure ethical conduct. There are multiple categories of research studies that affect how one should approach the IRB process. Studies that are exempt from IRB review are considered minimal-risk studies. Expedited studies are those in which risks are minimal but go beyond convenience. Studies that require full review involve sensitive or vulnerable contexts or pose potential risks that exceed minimal thresholds. After application, IRBs often require continuing review, amendments in the event of changes to the project, or disclosure of adverse events during data collection.

Unique Ethical Challenges to Qualitative Research

Emergent Design and Flexibility

Qualitative methodologies, such as grounded theory, ethnography, or phenomenology, often evolve during data collection. This poses challenges for IRBs accustomed to fixed quantitative protocols. Researchers should specify expected methods and include flexibility through amendment protocols.

Confidentiality and Identifiability

Qualitative data often contain nuanced narrative details that can pose confidentiality risks. Researchers should use pseudonyms, redact identifying details, and be transparent about any limits to anonymity.

Emotional and Psychological Risks

Sensitive qualitative topics may trigger distress in participants. IRBs require risks to be proactively assessed and mitigated, with plans for referral to support services.

Research Fatigue and Over-Studied Communities

Marginalized groups often experience research fatigue, adding burden without meaningful benefit. IRBs may deny approval for non-beneficial or redundant studies lacking community engagement.[2]

Best Practices in IRB Applications

Writing the Protocol: Clarity and Justification

IRBs require comprehensive descriptions of the study’s purpose, design, and theoretical basis; sampling rationale; inclusion/exclusion criteria; recruitment plans; data collection tools; and secondary uses.

Informed Consent: Beyond Signed Forms

Good consent processes must be dynamic and dialogical. Documents should clearly explain purposes, risks, voluntary withdrawal, and confidentiality protections. When literacy is limited or when a subject is sensitive, IRBs may allow verbal or oral consent, supplemented with IRB-approved scripts and supplemental materials.

Data Management and Confidentiality

IRBs require robust plans for the secure handling of data. It is important to use password-protected, encrypted files, store identifiers separately from transcripts, and use repositories with controlled access in compliance with IRB and journal standards.

Ongoing Review and Amendments

Even after initial approval, researchers must report all protocol amendments (like adding interviews or altering recruitment), submit timely continuing review reports, and rapidly report any unanticipated issues or complaints.[3]

Resources and Professional Support

Institutional Support Services

Many institutions provide Research Ethics Consultation (REC) to assist with protocol planning, risk assessment, and language refinement. It is helpful to use these services early, even before IRB submission, to improve chances of smooth approval.

Training and Workshops

Using online resources and modules from platforms like CITI or NIH and attending IRB-guided workshops are beneficial because they help boost your competence.[4]

Institutional Champions

Connecting with faculty and IRB members supportive of qualitative and social science research can be useful because they can help advocate for flexible protocols and ensure fair review.

Navigating IRB Challenges and Delays

Institutional Differences and Social Sciences Fit

Qualitative research often challenges IRB protocol templates designed for biomedical research. Engaging IRB members who are informed about social science methodologies early, or requesting social scientists on the review panel, can aid the IRB approval process.

Engaging Community and Participatory Protocols

For community-engaged designs like PAR/CBPR, protocols should reflect equitable partnerships and shared responsibilities. This includes acknowledging co-researchers, detailing participatory analysis plans, and ensuring flexibility in emergent design.[5]

Balancing Rigor and Bureaucracy

It is important to avoid “one-size-fits-all” biomedical forms. Researchers should use narrative descriptions and scholar-styled protocols to clarify emergent, iterative design and justify participant protections without unnecessary constraints.

Conclusion

Navigating IRB processes and ethical challenges in academic qualitative research requires a careful, ongoing balance among principled research design, critical reflexivity, and strategic institutional engagement. Qualitative inquiry often requires an adaptable, iterative approach that responds to the complexity of human experiences, social dynamics, and meaning-making. Successfully navigating these demands means complying with institutional review protocols and advocating for more nuanced understandings of ethics rooted in participants’ lived realities. Ethical review should not be seen as a bureaucratic hurdle but as a generative opportunity to strengthen both research design and researcher accountability.

Take Away

Ultimately, IRBs and researchers share a common goal of advancing knowledge without compromising human dignity. With informed preparation, clear communication, and a principled approach to consent, confidentiality, and community partnerships, qualitative researchers are well-positioned to obtain IRB approval for their studies.

[1] National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research. (1979). The Belmont Report: Ethical principles and guidelines for the protection of human subjects of research. U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. https://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/regulations-and-policy/belmont-report/index.html

[2] Ritchie, K. L. (2021). Using IRB Protocols to Teach Ethical Principles for Research and Everyday Life: A High-Impact Practice. Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 21(1), 120-130.

[3] Prentice, E. D., & Antonson, L. (1987). A protocol review guide to reduce IRB inconsistency. IRB: Ethics & Human Research, 9(1), 9-11.

[4] Prentice, E. D., & Antonson, L. (1987). A protocol review guide to reduce IRB inconsistency. IRB: Ethics & Human Research, 9(1), 9-11.

[5] Ritchie, K. L. (2021). Using IRB Protocols to Teach Ethical Principles for Research and Everyday Life: A High-Impact Practice. Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 21(1), 120-130.

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