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A conflict of interest in research exists when an investigator's financial interests or other obligations compromise,
or appear to compromise, his/her professional judgment in the design, conduct, or reporting of research. The mere
appearance of a conflict may be as serious and potentially damaging to the public trust as the actual conflict. Therefore,
potential conflicts must be disclosed, evaluated, and managed with the same thoroughness as actual conflicts. One example
of a conflict of interest in research would be if an investigator is a consultant for a company that sponsors his/her research.
Everyone involved in research at OHSU.
For outside investigators NOT holding a joint appointment at OHSU, only those involved in
OHSU IRB projects that do
not have a CoIR policy at their own institution (see
http://www.ohsu.edu/research/rda/coir/faq.shtml#outside)
Any significant financial interests potentially related to any current or pending research projects.
See definition at http://www.ohsu.edu/research/rda/coir/terms.shtml#sfi.
Additionally, some gifts and intellectual property must be disclosed as described on the disclosure form.
Examples are listed at http://www.ohsu.edu/research/rda/coir/guidelines.shtml.
A CoIR disclosure must be completed annually. Online disclosure forms should also be revised during the year if answers
to questions on the CoIR disclosure form change. All investigators listed on a research application submitted to Research
Development & Administration must have a correctly completed and up-to-date disclosure form in the CoIR Management System.
- Complete your CoIR disclosure online.
- Additional signatures required for positive disclosures. See the
signature requirements.
- Form will be reviewed by the CoIR committee.
For additional information contact the CoIR Office at (503) 494-7887 or
coir@ohsu.edu or the CoIR Integrity
Manager at (503)-494-6727 or
manningk@ohsu.edu.
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