97-12699. Strengthened Protections for Human Subjects of Classified Research  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 92 (Tuesday, May 13, 1997)]
    [Presidential Documents]
    [Pages 26369-26372]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-12699]
    
    
    
    [[Page 26367]]
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    The President
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    Memorandum of March 27, 1997--Strengthened Protections for Human 
    Subjects of Classified Research
    
    
                            Presidential Documents 
    
    
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 62, No. 92 / Tuesday, May 13, 1997 / 
    Presidential Documents
    
    ___________________________________________________________________
    
    Title 3--
    The President
    
    [[Page 26369]]
    
                    Memorandum of March 27, 1997
    
                    
    Strengthened Protections for Human Subjects of 
                    Classified Research
    
                    Memorandum for the Secretary of Defense, the Attorney 
                    General, the Secretary of Agriculture, the Secretary of 
                    Commerce, the Secretary of Labor, the Secretary of 
                    Health and Human Services, the Secretary of Housing and 
                    Urban Development, the Secretary of Transportation, the 
                    Secretary of Energy, the Secretary of Education, the 
                    Secretary of Veterans Affairs, the Director of Central 
                    Intelligence, the Administrator of the Environmental 
                    Protection Agency, the Administrator of the Agency for 
                    International Development, the Administrator of the 
                    National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the 
                    Director of the National Science Foundation, the Chair 
                    of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Director of 
                    the Office of Science and Technology Policy, [and] the 
                    Chair of the Consumer Product Safety Commission
    
                    I have worked hard to restore trust and ensure openness 
                    in government. This memorandum will further our 
                    progress toward these goals by strengthening the 
                    Federal Government's protections for human subjects of 
                    classified research.
    
                    In January 1994, I established the Advisory Committee 
                    on Human Radiation Experiments (the ``Advisory 
                    Committee'') to examine reports that the government had 
                    funded and conducted unethical human radiation 
                    experiments during the Cold War. I directed the 
                    Advisory Committee to uncover the truth, recommend 
                    steps to right past wrongs, and propose ways to prevent 
                    unethical human subjects research from occurring in the 
                    future. In its October 1995 final report, the Advisory 
                    Committee recommended, among other things, that the 
                    government modify its policy governing classified 
                    research on human subjects (``Recommendations for 
                    Balancing National Security Interests and the Rights of 
                    the Public,'' Recommendation 15, Final Report, Advisory 
                    Committee on Human Radiation Experiments). This 
                    memorandum sets forth policy changes in response to 
                    those recommendations.
    
                    The Advisory Committee acknowledged that it is in the 
                    Nation's interest to continue to allow the government 
                    to conduct classified research involving human subjects 
                    where such research serves important national security 
                    interests. The Advisory Committee found, however, that 
                    classified human subjects research should be a ``rare 
                    event'' and that the ``subjects of such research, as 
                    well as the interests of the public in openness in 
                    science and in government, deserve special 
                    protections.'' The Advisory Committee was concerned 
                    about ``exceptions to informed consent requirements and 
                    the absence of any special review and approval process 
                    for human research that is to be classified.'' The 
                    Advisory Committee recommended that in all classified 
                    research projects the agency conducting or sponsoring 
                    the research meet the following requirements:
    
                        --obtain informed consent from all human subjects;
                        --inform subjects of the identity of the sponsoring 
                    agency;
                        --inform subjects that the project involves 
                    classified research;
                        --obtain approval by an ``independent panel of 
                    nongovernmental experts and citizen representatives, 
                    all with the necessary security clearances'' that 
                    reviews scientific merit, risk-benefit tradeoffs, and 
                    ensures subjects have enough information to make 
                    informed decisions to give valid consent; and
    
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                        --maintain permanent records of the panel's 
                    deliberations and consent procedures.
    
                    This memorandum implements these recommendations with 
                    some modifications. For classified research, it 
                    prohibits waiver of informed consent and requires 
                    researchers to disclose that the project is classified. 
                    For all but minimal risk studies, it requires 
                    researchers to inform subjects of the sponsoring 
                    agency. It also requires permanent recordkeeping.
    
                    The memorandum also responds to the Advisory 
                    Committee's call for a special review process for 
                    classified human subjects research. It requires that 
                    institutional review boards for secret projects include 
                    a nongovernmental member, and establishes an appeals 
                    process so that any member of a review board who 
                    believes a project should not go forward can appeal the 
                    boards' decision to approve it.
    
                    Finally, this memorandum sets forth additional steps to 
                    ensure that classified human research is rare. It 
                    requires the heads of Federal agencies to disclose 
                    annually the number of secret human research projects 
                    undertaken by their agency. It also prohibits any 
                    agency from conducting secret human research without 
                    first promulgating a final rule applying the Federal 
                    Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects, as 
                    modified in this memorandum, to the agency.
    
                    These steps, set forth in detail below, will preserve 
                    the government's ability to conduct any necessary 
                    classified research involving human subjects while 
                    ensuring adequate protection of research participants.
    
                    1. Modifications to the Federal Policy for the 
                    Protection of Human Subjects as it Affects Classified 
                    Research. All agencies that may conduct or support 
                    classified research that is subject to the 1991 Federal 
                    Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects (``Common 
                    Rule'') (56 Fed. Reg. 28010-28018) shall promptly 
                    jointly publish in the Federal Register the following 
                    proposed revisions to the Common Rule as it affects 
                    classified research. The Office for Protection from 
                    Research Risks in the Department of Health and Human 
                    Services shall be the lead agency and, in consultation 
                    with the Office of Management and Budget, shall 
                    coordinate the joint rulemaking.
    
                        (a) The agencies shall jointly propose to prohibit 
                    waiver of informed consent for classified research.
                        (b) The agencies shall jointly propose to prohibit 
                    the use of expedited review procedures under the Common 
                    Rule for classified research.
                        (c) The joint proposal should request comment on 
                    whether all research exemptions under the Common Rule 
                    should be maintained for classified research.
                        (d) The agencies shall jointly propose to require 
                    that in classified research involving human subjects, 
                    two additional elements of information be provided to 
                    potential subjects when consent is sought from 
                    subjects:
                          (i) the identity of the sponsoring Federal 
                    agency. Exceptions are allowed if the head of the 
                    sponsoring agency determines that providing this 
                    information could compromise intelligence sources or 
                    methods and that the research involves no more than 
                    minimal risk to subjects. The determination about 
                    sources and methods is to be made in consultation with 
                    the Director of Central Intelligence and the Assistant 
                    to the President for National Security Affairs. The 
                    determination about risk is to be made in consultation 
                    with the Director of the White House Office of Science 
                    and Technology Policy.
                          (ii) a statement that the project is 
                    ``classified'' and an explanation of what classified 
                    means.
                        (e) The agencies shall jointly propose to modify 
                    the institutional review board (``IRB'') approval 
                    process for classified human subjects research as 
                    follows:
                          (i) The Common Rule currently requires that each 
                    IRB ``include at least one member who is not otherwise 
                    affiliated with the institution and
    
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                    who is not part of the immediate family of a person who 
                    is affiliated with the institution.'' For classified 
                    research, the agencies shall define ``not otherwise 
                    affiliated with the institution,'' as a nongovernmental 
                    member with the appropriate security clearance.
                          (ii) Under the Common Rule, research projects are 
                    approved by the IRB if a ``majority of those (IRB) 
                    members present at a meeting'' approved the project. 
                    For classified research, the agencies shall propose to 
                    permit any member of the IRB who does not believe a 
                    specific project should be approved by the IRB to 
                    appeal a majority decision to approve the project to 
                    the head of the sponsoring agency. If the agency head 
                    affirms the IRB's decision to approve the project, the 
                    dissenting IRB member may appeal the IRB's decisions to 
                    the Director of OSTP. The Director of OSTP shall review 
                    the IRB's decision and approve or disapprove the 
                    project, or, at the Director's discretion, convene an 
                    IRB made up of nongovernmental officials, each with the 
                    appropriate security clearances, to approve or 
                    disapprove the project.
                          (iii) IRBs for classified research shall 
                    determine whether potential subjects need access to 
                    classified information to make a valid informed consent 
                    decision.
    
                    2. Final Rules. Agencies shall, within 1 year, after 
                    considering any comments, promulgate final rules on the 
                    protection of human subjects of classified research.
    
                    3. Agency Head Approval of Classified Research 
                    Projects. Agencies may not conduct any classified human 
                    research project subject to the Common Rule unless the 
                    agency head has personally approved the specific 
                    project.
    
                    4. Annual Public Disclosure of the Number of Classified 
                    Research Projects. Each agency head shall inform the 
                    Director of OSTP by September 30 of each year of the 
                    number of classified research projects involving human 
                    subjects underway on that date, the number completed in 
                    the previous 12-month period, and the number of human 
                    subjects in each project. The Director of OSTP shall 
                    report the total number of classified research projects 
                    and participating subjects to the President and shall 
                    then report to the congressional armed services and 
                    intelligence committees and further shall publish the 
                    numbers in the Federal Register.
    
                    5. Definitions. For purposes of this memorandum, the 
                    terms ``research'' and ``human subject'' shall have the 
                    meaning set forth in the Common Rule. ``Classified 
                    human research'' means research involving ``classified 
                    information'' as defined in Executive Order 12958.
    
                    6. No Classified Human Research Without Common Rule. 
                    Beginning one year after the date of this memorandum, 
                    no agency shall conduct or support classified human 
                    research without having proposed and promulgated the 
                    Common Rule, including the changes set forth in this 
                    memorandum and any subsequent amendments.
    
                    7. Judicial Review. This memorandum is not intended to 
                    create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, 
                    enforceable at law by a party against the United 
                    States, its agencies, its officers, or any other 
                    persons.
    
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                    8. The Secretary of Health and Human Services shall 
                    publish this memorandum in the Federal Register.
    
                        (Presidential Sig.)
    
                    THE WHITE HOUSE,
    
                        Washington, March 27, 1997.
    
    [FR Doc. 97-12699
    Filed 5-12-97; 8:45 am]
    Billing code 4110-60-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
05/13/1997
Department:
Executive Office of the President
Entry Type:
Presidential Document
Document Type:
Memorandum
Document Number:
97-12699
Pages:
26369-26372 (4 pages)
EOCitation:
of 1997-03-27
PDF File:
97-12699.pdf