Literature DB >> 18281363

Assessing the impact of the requirement for explicit consent in a hospital-based stroke study.

C Jackson1, L Crossland, M Dennis, J Wardlaw, C Sudlow.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Increasing regulation of medical research, in particular the requirement for explicit consent, may reduce the quantity and quality of clinical epidemiological research. AIM: To assess the potential biases arising from the need for explicit consent in our hospital-based stroke research register.
DESIGN: Comparison of patients enrolled into our stroke research register with those included in a concurrent clinical stroke audit that targeted the same population but did not require explicit consent.
METHODS: We obtained the numbers of consenters, refusers and those from whom consent was not sought for various logistical reasons. We compared characteristics of participants (those eventually included in the research register) vs. non-participants.
RESULTS: Of 1228 patients included in the stroke audit during an 18-month period, 1075 (88%) were also included in the research register, with higher participation among outpatients than inpatients. Only 1% of eligible patients refused involvement in any aspect of the research register. By far the largest number of non-participants was those from whom we could not seek consent for practical reasons. Comparison of baseline characteristics showed important differences between participants and non-participants that could affect outcome.
CONCLUSION: Very few patients refused inclusion in our research register, but the need for explicit consent reduced participation and introduced bias. An opt-out system avoiding the need for explicit patient consent for minimally intrusive clinical epidemiological studies would minimize bias and reduce the considerable time and costs associated with the consent process.

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Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18281363      PMCID: PMC2569699          DOI: 10.1093/qjmed/hcm152

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  QJM        ISSN: 1460-2393


  10 in total

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3.  Funding for practice-oriented clinical research.

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7.  A feasibility study of signed consent for the collection of patient identifiable information for a national paediatric clinical audit database.

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8.  Classification and natural history of clinically identifiable subtypes of cerebral infarction.

Authors:  J Bamford; P Sandercock; M Dennis; J Burn; C Warlow
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9.  Bias from requiring explicit consent from all participants in observational research: prospective, population based study.

Authors:  Rustam Al-Shahi; Céline Vousden; Charles Warlow
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10.  Impracticability of informed consent in the Registry of the Canadian Stroke Network.

Authors:  Jack V Tu; Donald J Willison; Frank L Silver; Jiming Fang; Janice A Richards; Andreas Laupacis; Moira K Kapral
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  10 in total
  9 in total

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4.  Comparison of statistical and clinical predictions of functional outcome after ischemic stroke.

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5.  Associations of clinical stroke misclassification ('clinical-imaging dissociation') in acute ischemic stroke.

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6.  Long-term mortality and recurrent vascular events in lacunar versus non-lacunar ischaemic stroke: A cohort study.

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Review 7.  Inflammatory markers and poor outcome after stroke: a prospective cohort study and systematic review of interleukin-6.

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8.  Enlarged perivascular spaces and cerebral small vessel disease.

Authors:  Gillian M Potter; Fergus N Doubal; Caroline A Jackson; Francesca M Chappell; Cathie L Sudlow; Martin S Dennis; Joanna M Wardlaw
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9.  Rare variants of the 3'-5' DNA exonuclease TREX1 in early onset small vessel stroke.

Authors:  Hugh S Markus; Cathie Sudlow; David P J Hunt; Sarah McGlasson; Kristiina Rannikmäe; Steven Bevan; Clare Logan; Louise S Bicknell; Alexa Jury; Andrew P Jackson
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  9 in total

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