Audio/Video/Digital Recordings of Research Participants

Because audio, video or digital recordings include images or voices of research participants, they pose a greater concern to the IRB than do data that do not have readily available identifying information. Therefore, to best protect research participants, the IRB requires that any such recordings be destroyed within a definitive time frame (e.g., five years following the making of the recordings, five years after data are collected).

Although recordings are not specifically addressed in 45 CFR 46, the consent process is clearly defined and holding recordings indefinitely and/or for an unspecified purpose challenges the spirit of informed consent and has the potential to increase risk to participants (e.g., breach of confidentiality, damage to reputation, legal ramifications). To be in line with informed consent and to minimize risk, participants must be informed (in the informed consent form) about the destruction timeframe, as well as informed about who will have access to the recordings and where they will be stored.

PLEASE NOTE: Exceptional circumstances will be considered on a case-by-case basis to determine whether these guidelines should or should not apply.

Archiving Recordings for Future Research

Because the IRB recognizes the potential value in archiving recordings for future research, if an investigator wishes to archive recordings, the IRB requires the following information to consider the request:

  1. Included in the application must be sound justification for archiving recordings indefinitely.
  2. The informed consent form must include the following: