| Literature DB >> 25267351 |
Rima T Nakkash, Ahmad Al Mulla, Lena Torossian, Roubina Karhily, Lama Shuayb, Ziyad R Mahfoud, Ibrahim Janahi, Al Anoud Al Ansari, Rema A Afifi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Involving children in research studies requires obtaining parental permission. A school-based intervention to delay/prevent waterpipe use for 7th and 8th graders in Qatar was developed, and parental permission requested. Fifty three percent (2308/4314) of the parents returned permission forms; of those 19.5% of the total (840/4314) granted permission. This paper describes the challenges to obtaining parental permission. No research to date has described such challenges in the Arab world.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25267351 PMCID: PMC4254406 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6939-15-70
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Characteristics of schools who agreed to allow parents to be contacted for the qualitative interviews and schools who did not*
| Variable | Schools that agreed to provide parental contact information | Schools that did not agree to provide parental contact information | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| N** (%) | N** (%) | 0.666 |
| Only boys | 6 (50.0%) | 9 (32.1%) | |
| Only girls | 4 (33.3%) | 13 (46.4%) | |
| Co-educational | 2 (16.7%) | 6 (21.4%) | |
|
| 62.7% (29.1%) | 48.2% (26.2%) | .130 |
|
| 24.7% (16.1%) | 16.3% (12.0%) | .077 |
*The sample size may limit the possibility of meaningful statistical analysis of differences for this question.
**N = number of schools.
Reasons given by parents for not consenting to their child’s participation in the study
| Reason for not consenting | N = 540 (%) as mentioned in consent form |
|---|---|
| 1. Inappropriate timing for study implementation (exam period, etc.…) | 24.8% |
| 2. Parent not interested | 13.3% |
| 3. No specific reason given | 12.2% |
| 4. Child doesn’t want to participate | 10.9% |
| 5. Child lives in a smoke-free environment | 9.8% |
| 6. Child does not need to participate | 8.5% |
| 7. Personal reasons | 5.3% |
| 8. The topic is more relevant to boys than to girls | 2.9% |
| 9. Others (Afraid that the child might be harmed, Location of study implementation not clear, Objection to saliva collection, Responsibility of family to explain to the child about such topics) | 3.1% |
| 10. Opening the child’s eyes to topic s/he should not know about | 2.0% |
| 11. Child’s health | 2.0% |
| 12. Risks and benefits of study not clear | 1.8% |
| 13. The child is too young for the topic | 1.7% |
| 14. Parent doesn’t understand the topic or thinks doesn’t think s/he should participate | 1.7% |
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Analysis of parental consent decision by child and parent gender for the 28 parents who were interviewed
| Parent consented | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | % Yes | |
|
| |||
| Male | 7 | 6 | 53.8% |
| Female | 9 | 6 | 64.3% |
|
| |||
| Male | 8 | 5 | 61.5% |
| Female* | 8 | 7 | 53.3% |
*one of the female respondents was an older sister rather than a mother.