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Standard Operating Procedure Table of Contents
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Purpose
To increase participation of children in human
subjects research so investigators can gather data to support treatments
that may affect children.
Procedure
You must include children in all human subjects research conducted or
supported by NIH unless you have scientific or ethical reasons for excluding
them.
NIH developed its inclusion of children policy because medical treatments
used in children are frequently based on tests performed only on adults,
and children have less access to scientifically evaluated treatments
because of barriers that exclude them from research studies.
NIH policy defines a child as a person under the age of 21. It applies
to all human subjects research, including research that is exempt from
other human subjects requirements according to Sections
101
(b) and 401
(b) of 45
CFR 46 -- Federal Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects.
Studies may use a specific age range of children. Investigators must provide a rationale for including or excluding an age group.
For more details, see NIH
Policy and Guidelines on the Inclusion of Children as Participants
in Research Involving Human Subjects and Office for Human Research Protections, Research Involving Children Frequently Asked
Questions.
Investigators
- Describe plans for including children in grant applications involving human subjects.
- Peer
reviewers
evaluate plans for including or excluding children.
- Reviewers judge whether the age group you propose is appropriate to the study. Just stating you are including children is not sufficient.
- If you are including or excluding a specific age group of children, provide a justification.
- If excluding children, provide a justification.
- Reviewers will assess whether any justifications are appropriate.
- Inadequate plans may negatively affect your score. We will ask you to resolve them before award, which can
mean a bar
to award.
To learn more, see Human
Subjects -- Warning, What
Happens if Reviewers Have Concerns?, and the Bars
to Grant Awards SOP.
CSR and Scientific Review Program Staff
- Before initial
peer review, determine if applications meet requirements
for including children in the research.
- Ask reviewers to assess the appropriateness of the justification provided for including or excluding children and, if applicable, for including or excluding a specific age group.
- Include appropriate expertise on the review panel for the review
of applications involving children.
- Following the review of grant applications, assess the review panel's
recommendations, document the final opinion in the summary
statement,
and record the human subjects and child inclusion codes in IMPAC.
Program Officers
- Resolve inclusion of children compliance issues
for applications coded unacceptable before funding.
Grants Management Staff and Program Officers
Contacts
See the GMP
Assignments by Geographic Region and Program Code for the appropriate
specialist.
Contact
for NIAID Staff
If you have knowledge to share or want more information on this topic, email deaweb@niaid.nih.gov with the title of this page or its URL and your question or comment. Thanks for helping us clarify and expand our knowledge base.
Links
45
CFR 46, Protection of Human Subjects, HHS
NIAID's Grant Application portal
Human Subjects Research Requirements SOP and other Human Subjects SOPs
IMPAC and CRISP SOP
NIAID Human Subjects Resources portal
OER Inclusion of Children Policy Implementation
OER
Inclusion of Children Policy Implementation Page
Office for Human Research Protections,
HHS Trans
NIAID Clinical Research Toolkit |