Ottawa Health Research Institute, Ottawa Hospital, Civic Campus, 1053 Carling Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario, K1Y 4E9, Canada.
Implement Sci. 2008 Jul 23;3:38. doi: 10.1186/1748-5908-3-38.
Evidence shows that the standard process for obtaining informed consent in clinical trials can be inadequate, with study participants frequently not understanding even basic information fundamental to giving informed consent. Patient decision aids are effective decision support tools originally designed to help patients make difficult treatment or screening decisions. We propose that incorporating decision aids into the informed consent process will improve the extent to which participants make decisions that are informed and consistent with their preferences. A mixed methods study will test this proposal.
Phase one of this project will involve assessment of a stratified random sample of 50 consent documents from recently completed investigator-initiated clinical trials, according to existing standards for supporting good decision making. Phase two will involve interviews of a purposive sample of 50 trial participants (10 participants from each of five different clinical areas) about their experience of the informed consent process, and how it could be improved. In phase three, we will convert consent forms for two completed clinical trials into decision aids and pilot test these new tools using a user-centered design approach, an iterative development process commonly employed in computer usability literature. In phase four, we will conduct a pilot observational study comparing the new tools to standard consent forms, with potential recruits to two hypothetical clinical trials. Outcomes will include knowledge of key aspects of the decision, knowledge of the probabilities of different outcomes, decisional conflict, the hypothetical participation decision, and qualitative impressions of the experience.
This work will provide initial evidence about whether a patient decision aid can improve the informed consent process. The larger goal of this work is to examine whether study recruitment can be improved from (barely) informed consent based on disclosure-oriented documents, towards a process of high-quality participant decision-making.
有证据表明,临床试验中获取知情同意的标准流程可能不够完善,研究参与者经常对做出知情同意所必需的基本信息一无所知。患者决策辅助工具是最初为帮助患者做出困难的治疗或筛查决策而设计的有效决策支持工具。我们提出,将决策辅助工具纳入知情同意过程将提高参与者做出知情且符合其偏好的决策的程度。一项混合方法研究将对此假设进行检验。
该项目的第一阶段将根据支持良好决策的现有标准,评估最近完成的由研究者发起的临床试验中 50 份同意书的分层随机样本。第二阶段将对 50 名试验参与者(每个临床领域 10 名参与者)进行访谈,了解他们对知情同意过程的体验,以及如何改进该过程。在第三阶段,我们将把两项已完成临床试验的同意书转化为决策辅助工具,并使用以用户为中心的设计方法(计算机可用性文献中常用的迭代开发过程)对这些新工具进行试点测试。在第四阶段,我们将进行一项试点观察性研究,将新工具与标准同意书进行比较,潜在的招募对象是两项假设性临床试验。结果包括对决策关键方面的了解、对不同结果概率的了解、决策冲突、假设性参与决策以及对体验的定性印象。
这项工作将提供关于患者决策辅助工具是否可以改善知情同意过程的初步证据。这项工作的更大目标是检验研究招募是否可以从基于披露导向文件的勉强知情同意,转变为高质量的参与者决策过程。