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Ethics, Human Use, and the Department of Defense Serum Repository.

Authors

Pavlin JA, Welch RA

Affiliations

  • Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center, 11800 Tech Road, Silver Spring, MD 20904.

Abstract

The Department of Defense Serum Repository (DoDSR) contains a growing archive of sera from service members collected to perform medical surveillance, clinical diagnosis, and epidemiologic studies to identify, prevent, and control diseases associated with military service. The specimens are a mandatory collection under DoD and U.S. regulations and do not include informed consent for uses beyond force health protection. Any use of the specimens for research requires deidentification of the samples and must be approved by Institutional Review Boards. However, as expansion of the DoDSR is contemplated, ethical considerations of sample collection, storage, and use must be carefully reconsidered. Other similar programs for research use of specimens collected for public health purpose are also undergoing similar reviews. It is recommended that at a minimum, service members are informed of the potential storage and use of their specimens and are allowed to opt out of additional use, or a broad informed consent is provided. The DoDSR provides a tremendous resource to the DoD and global health community, and to ensure its continued existence and improvement, the DoD must stay consistent with all principles of research ethics.

Publication Details

PubMed ID
26444892

Digital Object Identifier
10.7205/MILMED-D-14-00725

Publication
Mil Med. 2015 Oct; Volume 180 (Issue 10 Suppl): Pages 49-56

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