| Literature DB >> 18445261 |
Jan Lecouturier1, Helen Rodgers, Gary A Ford, Tim Rapley, Lynne Stobbart, Stephen J Louw, Madeleine J Murtagh.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In emergency research, obtaining informed consent can be problematic. Research to develop and improve treatments for patients admitted to hospital with life-threatening and debilitating conditions is much needed yet the issue of research without consent (RWC) raises concerns about unethical practices and the loss of individual autonomy. Consistent with the policy and practice turn towards greater patient and public involvement in health care decisions, in the US, Canada and EU, guidelines and legislation implemented to protect patients and facilitate acute research with adults who are unable to give consent have been developed with little involvement of the lay public. This paper reviews research examining public opinion regarding RWC for research in emergency situations, and whether the rules and regulations permitting research of this kind are in accordance with the views of those who ultimately may be the most affected.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18445261 PMCID: PMC2390563 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6939-9-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Search terms used
| patient* views OR | ||
| emergency research OR | patient* perception* OR | |
| emergency medicine OR | patient* opinion* OR | |
| exception from informed consent OR | patient* attitude* OR | |
| waiver of informed consent OR | public* views OR | |
| emergency exception OR | public* perception* OR | |
| resuscitation research | public* opinion* OR | |
| public* attitude* |
Studies reporting public opinion of research without consent – Aspects of study design
| Smithline & Gerstle (1998) [29] | US | Interview survey | Emergency Dept pts | 204 | Patient had serious illness | Agree/disagree |
| 1. Study intervention with minimal absolute risk | ||||||
| 2. Study intervention with greater than minimal absolute risk | ||||||
| McClure et al (2003) [31] | US | Interview survey | Emergency Dept pts & visitors | 530 | 1. Study intervention with minimal absolute risk | 5-point Likert scale |
| 2. Study intervention with greater than minimal absolute risk | ||||||
| Two study scenarios: | ||||||
| 1. New therapies for serious bleeding | ||||||
| 2. Efficacy of public access to defibrillation | ||||||
| Abboud et al (2006) [32] | US | Interview survey | Emergency Dept pts | 207 | Patient in cardiac arrest | |
| Geriatric Clinic pts | 213 | Two surgical procedures: | ||||
| 1. Less invasive, intravenous line (minimal risk) | 4-point Likert scale | |||||
| 2. More invasive, thoracotomy (>minimal risk) | ||||||
| New experimental medicine in three study designs: | ||||||
| 1. Outside of a study protocol; | ||||||
| 2. Part of a study protocol; | ||||||
| 3. In a randomised controlled trial | ||||||
| Goldstein et al (2007). [33] | US | Interview survey | Emergency Dept pts | 473 | Patient suffered cardiac arrest or stroke | Not stated |
| Triner et al (2007) [34] | US | Interview survey | Emergency Dept pts & visitors | 497 | General description of waiver of and exception from informed consent studies | 5-point Likert scale |
| Booth et al (2005) [30] | UK | Self-completion questionnaire | Out-patients | 362 | Patient suffered heart attack, stroke or head injury | Yes/No/Don't know |
| 1. Study intervention with minimal risk | ||||||
| 2. Study intervention with moderate risk |
Studies reporting public opinion of research without consent – Findings
| Smithline & Gerstle (1998) [29] | Emergency Dept pts | 204 | - | - | 73 | 50 | Educational status and certain aspects of health status | Age, race, gender, perception of current acute illness. |
| McClure et al (2003) [31] | Emergency Dept pts & visitors | 500+ | 34 | 70 | 75 | 50 | Race | Gender, religion, education, insurance status, knowledge of resuscitation medicine. |
| Abboud et al (2006) [32] | Emergency Dept pts | 207 | - | 70 | 88 | 77 | Study design, invasiveness of intervention, patient group | Age, race; marital status, living situation, religion, church attendance, education, having an advance directive |
| Geriatric Clinic pts | 213 | 48 | 63 | 48 | Geriatric clinic patients only – gender and health status | |||
| Goldstein et al (2007). [33] | Emergency Dept pts | 473 | 51 | 57 | - | - | Age, gender, race, ethnicity, education, insurance status, religion, confidence in current therapies & knowledge of requirements for RWC studies | |
| Triner et al (2007) [34] | Emergency Dept pts & visitors | 497 | 42 | 50 | - | - | Age, Gender, ethnicity | Marital status, education. |
| Booth et al (2005) 12 | Out-patients | 362 | 84 | - | 92 | 67 | None reported | None reported |
not measured