Effectiveness of the informed consent process for a pediatric resuscitation trial

When prospective informed consent is not feasible, clinical research that presents more than minimal risk can proceed only with an exception from informed consent. Our objectives were (1) to describe the in-hospital community consultation and public disclosure process for a clinical trial and (2) to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pediatrics (Evanston) 2010-04, Vol.125 (4), p.e866-e875
Hauptverfasser: Raymond, Tia Tortoriello, Carroll, Timothy Glenn, Sales, Glenda, Morris, Marilyn Cummings
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container_end_page e875
container_issue 4
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container_title Pediatrics (Evanston)
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creator Raymond, Tia Tortoriello
Carroll, Timothy Glenn
Sales, Glenda
Morris, Marilyn Cummings
description When prospective informed consent is not feasible, clinical research that presents more than minimal risk can proceed only with an exception from informed consent. Our objectives were (1) to describe the in-hospital community consultation and public disclosure process for a clinical trial and (2) to evaluate our in-hospital public disclosure process. Community consultation included parents, providers, and administrators in a PICU via focus groups, conferences, and other methods. Public disclosure consisted of a brochure and a poster in all PICU waiting rooms. These materials described risks and benefits of the trial, that no consent would be sought, how to "opt out," and how to provide feedback. A verbal questionnaire was administered to parents of potential patients during the trial to evaluate the public disclosure process. Eighty-one percent of 93 parents were aware of the ongoing trial. Seventy-six of 93 remembered seeing the brochure; of these, 26% did not read, 39% read quickly, and 35% read carefully. Thirty-seven of 93 parents remembered seeing the poster; of these, 51% did not read, 32% read quickly, and 17% read carefully. Sixty-seven percent reported that they would want to participate in the study, 9% would not, and 24% were undecided. Of the 7 parents who did not want to participate, 3 had opted out and 4 were unaware that they could opt out. Parents endorsed resuscitation research with an exception from informed consent. Public disclosure yielded >80% parental awareness. Efforts should be made to ensure awareness of the ability to opt out.
doi_str_mv 10.1542/peds.2009-2427
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source MEDLINE; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Adolescent
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
Child
Child, Preschool
Children & youth
Clinical Trials as Topic - methods
CPR
Disclosure
Female
Hormones
Humans
Infant
Informed Consent
Intensive Care Units, Pediatric
Male
Medical research
Pediatrics
Pilot Projects
Prospective Studies
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - methods
Resuscitation - methods
title Effectiveness of the informed consent process for a pediatric resuscitation trial
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