| Literature DB >> 18565230 |
Abraham R Oduro1, Raymond A Aborigo, Dickson Amugsi, Francis Anto, Thomas Anyorigiya, Frank Atuguba, Abraham Hodgson, Kwadwo A Koram.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The individual informed consent model remains critical to the ethical conduct and regulation of research involving human beings. Parental informed consent process in a rural setting of northern Ghana was studied to describe comprehension and retention among parents as part of the evaluation of the existing informed consent process.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18565230 PMCID: PMC2443367 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6939-9-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Baseline socio-economic characteristics of study participants
| Age groups (years) | < 25 | 14.8 (40) | [10.7, 19.6] |
| 25–35 | 48.5(131) | [42.4, 54.6] | |
| > 35 | 36.7(99) | [30.9, 42.7] | |
| Formal education (years) | None | 53.7 (145) | [47.5, 59.8] |
| 1–9 | 42.6 (115) | [36.6, 48.7] | |
| > 9 | 3.7 (10) | [1.7, 6.7] | |
| Primary occupation | Farming | 62.2 (168) | [56.1, 68.0] |
| Trading | 34.1 (92) | [28.4, 40.1] | |
| Others | 3.7 (10) | [1.7, 6.7] | |
| Marital status | Married | 91.9 (248) | [87.9, 94.8] |
| Single | 2.6 (7) | [1.0, 5.3] | |
| Others | 5.6 (15) | [3.1, 9.0] | |
| Religion | Christianity | 71.9 (194) | [66.0, 77.1] |
| Islam | 0.7 (2) | [0.1, 2.1] | |
| African traditional | 27.4 (74) | [22.1, 33.1] |
The table shows the various categories of baseline socioecominc characteristics of the study participants.
Relation between parental characteristics and understanding
| Characteristics | |||
| < 25 (40) vs. >24 (230) | Some (125) vs. Never (145) | Farming (168) vs. Others (102) | |
| 80.0 vs.63.9 | 70.4 vs. 62.8 | 63.7 vs. 70.5 | |
| Diff. (95% CI) | 16.1 (2.2, 30.0) | 7.6 (-3.6, 18.5) | 6.8 (-18.2, 4.7) |
| 70.0 vs. 62.2 | 65.6 vs. 61.4 | 67.9 vs. 55.9 | |
| Diff. (95% CI) | 7.8 (-7.7, 23.3) | 4.2 (-7.2, 15.7) | 12.0 (0.1, 23.9) |
| 85.0 vs.66.1 | 72.4 vs. 64.1 | 66.7 vs. 72.5 | |
| Diff. (95% CI) | 18.9 (6.2, 31.5) | 8.3 (-2.7, 19.4) | 5.8 (-17.0, 5.4) |
| 35.0 vs.17.8 | 21.6 vs. 19.3 | 15.5 vs. 28.4 | |
| Diff. (95% CI) | 17.2 (1.6, 32.8) | 2.3 (-7.3, 12.0) | 12.9 (-23.2, -2.6) |
*Statistically significant findings
A table showing association between categories of parental characteristics and the percentage of them who had comprehension of selected informed consent themes.
Figure 1Bar chart of parental comprehension of research informed consent. The Bar chart shows the percentage of parents who gave responses to indicate they understood information given under a particular informed consent theme.
Participants suggestions for improving the informed consent process.
| 1. Devote more time to explain the study | 46.9 (68) | [38.5, 55.3] |
| 2. Explain the consent in local languages | 15.9 (23) | [10.3, 22.8] |
| 3. Explain the study in patient homes | 10.3 (15) | [5.9, 16.4] |
| 4. Investigators should decide the best way | 7.6 (11) | [3.8, 13.1] |
| 5. The need to reconsent after some time | 6.2 (9) | [2.8, 11.4] |
| 6. Other suggestions | 13.1 (19) | [8.0, 19.7] |
A table of suggestions and ways made by the study participants to the investigators to help improve the informed consent process in the study area.