| Literature DB >> 30419910 |
Kiran Pohar Manhas1,2,3, Shawn X Dodd4, Stacey Page5,6, Nicole Letourneau7, Carol E Adair5, Xinjie Cui8, Suzanne C Tough9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mandates abound to share publicly-funded research data for reuse, while data platforms continue to emerge to facilitate such reuse. Birth cohorts (BC) involve longitudinal designs, significant sample sizes and rich and deep datasets. Data sharing benefits include more analyses, greater research complexity, increased opportunities for collaboration, amplification of public contributions, and reduced respondent burdens. Sharing BC data involves significant challenges including consent, privacy, access policies, communication, and vulnerability of the child. Research on these issues is available for biological data, but these findings may not extend to BC data. We lack consensus on how best to approach these challenges in consent, privacy, communication and autonomy when sharing BC data. We require more stakeholder engagement to understand perspectives and generate consensus.Entities:
Keywords: Consent; Data repository; Data sharing; Non-biological data; Parent; Pediatric
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30419910 PMCID: PMC6233367 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-018-0683-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Fig. 1Definitions of the five consent models examined in this survey (from highest to lowest level of engagement)
Participant demographics
| Characteristic | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Longitudinal Birth Cohort | |
| All Our Babies | 105 (30.3) |
| Alberta Pregnancy Outcomes and Nutrition | 188 (54.3) |
| Both | 50 (14.5) |
| Missing | 3 (0.8) |
| Sex | |
| Male | 5 (1.4) |
| Female | 339 (98.0) |
| Missing | 2 (0.5) |
| Age (years of age) | |
| | 110 (31.8) |
| > 35 | 208 (69.1) |
| Missing | 28 (8.1) |
| Education | |
| High School (Completed) | 9 (2.6) |
| Business, Trade, Technical School (Incomplete or completed) | 51 (14.7) |
| Bachelor’s Degree (Incomplete or completed) | 190 (54.9) |
| Graduate School (Incomplete or completed) | 92 (26.6) |
| Missing | 4 (1.2) |
| Country of Origin | |
| Canada | 300 (86.7) |
| Other | 34 (9.8) |
| Missing | 12 (3.4) |
Participant consent preferences for secondary use
| Preferred consent model if asked to share data from their original cohort | Preferred consent model if participating in a new study | |
|---|---|---|
| Traditional, Opt-In Consent | 75 (21.9) | 78 (22.8) |
| Broad, One-Time Consent | 33 (9.6) | 35 (10.2) |
| Broad, Periodic Consent | 33 (9.6) | 25 (7.3) |
| Tiered (or Conditional) Consent | 40 (11.7) | 41 (12.0) |
| Opt-Out Consent | 162 (47.2) | 163 (47.7) |
Relationships between consent preferences, communication frequency and information type
| Preferred consent model if asked to share their data from their original cohort. Consent should be reviewed… | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Each time dataset is shared n(row/column%) | Periodically n(row/column%) | Never n(row/column%) | p-value | |
| Are you interested in receiving information about projects that arise from the study you participated in? | ||||
| Yes | 73 (24.58/97.33) | 92 (30.98/86.79) | 132 (44.44/81.48) | 0.004 |
| No | 2 (4.35/2.67) | 14 (30.43/13.21) | 30 (65.22/18.52) | |
| Are you interested in receiving information about the general findings from the dataset you contributed to? | ||||
| Yes | 68 (22.59/90.67) | 92 (30.56/86.79) | 141 (46.84/87.04) | 0.684 |
| No | 7 (16.67/9.33) | 14 (33.33/13.21) | 21 (50.00/12.96) | |
| Are you interested in receiving information about the general findings from all the data at the data repository? | ||||
| Yes | 36 (29.75/48.00) | 34 (28.10/32.08) | 51 (42.15/31.48) | 0.033 |
| No | 39 (17.57/52.00) | 72 (32.43/67.92) | 111 (50.00/68.52) | |
| Are you interested in receiving information about any changes made to the data repository? | ||||
| Yes | 35 (25.55/46.67) | 49 (35.77/46.23) | 53 (38.69/32.72) | 0.035 |
| No | 40 (19.42/53.33) | 57 (27.67/53.77) | 109 (52.91/67.28) | |
| Based on the information you would like to receive, how often would you most like to hear from the data repository? | ||||
| Anytime new information arises | 30 (34.09/41.10) | 17 (19.32/16.04) | 41 (46.59/26.11) | 0.003 |
| Every 6 months | 23 (23.71/31.51) | 33 (34.02/31.13) | 41 (42.27/26.11) | |
| Once a year | 18 (13.43/24.66) | 52 (38.81/49.06) | 64 (47.76/40.76) | |
| Every other year | 2 (11.76/2.74) | 4 (23.53/3.77) | 11 (64.71/7.01) | |
| Please indicate your most preferred method of contact. | ||||
| A personalized email | 41 (23.98/55.41) | 60 (35.09/57.14) | 70 (40.94/43.75) | 0.060 |
| A general newsletter | 21 (15.67/28.38) | 39 (29.10/37.14) | 74 (55.22/46.25) | |
| A secure, regularly-updated website only open to participants | 9 (33.33/12.16) | 5 (18.52/4.76) | 13 (48.15/8.12) | |
| A secure, regularly-updated website open to the public | 3 (42.86/4.05) | 1 (14.29/0.95) | 3 (42.86/1.88) | |
Parent preferences on child involvement in decision-making for longitudinal research participation
| Level of agreement with child involvement in RESEARCH STUDIES | Level of agreement with child involvement in DATA SHARING | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Disagree | Neutral | Agree | Disagree | Neutral | Agree | |
| Tell - My child will be informed that they are part of a research study/their non-biological, de-identified data is being shared. As their parent. I decide the availability of their participation. | 36 (10.5) | 39 (11.3) | 271 (79.0) | 26 (7.5) | 36 (10.4) | 283 (82.1) |
| Talk - My child will be involved in discussions about their participation in the research study/sharing their non-biological, de-identified data. They can express their opinion and preferences. As their parent, I will decide their participation. | 39 (11.4) | 51 (14.8) | 255 (74.6) | 28 (8.2) | 37 (10.8) | 277 (81.0) |
| Decide - My child will decide whether or not, and how, they participate in the research study/share their non-biological, de-identified data. | 21 (6.1) | 19 (5.5) | 305 (89.2) | 75 (21.8) | 46 (13.3) | 224 (64.9) |
Fig. 2Parent views on appropriate child ages to “tell”, “talk” and “decide” about research participation and data sharing