Chapter 18
Pre-treatment Administrative Responsibilities
Chapter 18 — Pre-treatment Administrative Responsibilities Before a single subject is treated, the experimenter faces a checklist of administrative obligations that determine whether the study will be feasible, ethical, and credible. This chapter walks through the full pre-treatment sequence: IRB protocol approval, pilot studies, pre-registration, pre-analysis plans (PAPs), data use agreements, and registered reports. A six-item due diligence checklist distills best practices. The key message: these tasks are not bureaucratic overhead—they are the infrastructure of trustworthy science, and their completion neither guarantees nor substitutes for genuine ethical commitment.
- The experimental process starts long before the application of treatment and involves several administrative tasks — from IRB approval to pre-registration — which can be time-consuming and create setbacks.
- While some view pre-treatment administrative tasks as purely tedious and burdensome, they serve an important purpose in achieving EP1 and EP2 ethically and cost-effectively.
- A six-item due diligence administrative checklist offers best practices to attenuate onerous experiences, promote transparency and confidence, and give your science its best chance to run smoothly and timely.
- Experimental morals cannot be outsourced: administrative task completion is neither a necessary nor a sufficient condition to achieve an ethically gold-standard study.