Bioethics Program, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Alzheimers Dement. 2010 Jul;6(4):342-50. doi: 10.1016/j.jalz.2009.06.001. Epub 2010 Feb 26.
Research involving incapacitated persons with dementia entails complex scientific, legal, and ethical issues, making traditional surveys of layperson views on the ethics of such research challenging. We therefore assessed the impact of democratic deliberation (DD), involving balanced, detailed education and peer deliberation, on the views of those responsible for persons with dementia.
One hundred and seventy-eight community-recruited caregivers or primary decision-makers for persons with dementia were randomly assigned to either an all-day DD session group or a control group. Educational materials used for the DD session were vetted for balance and accuracy by an interdisciplinary advisory panel. We assessed the acceptability of family-surrogate consent for dementia research ("surrogate-based research") from a societal policy perspective as well as from the more personal perspectives of deciding for a loved one or for oneself (surrogate and self-perspectives), assessed at baseline, immediately post-DD session, and 1 month after DD date, for four research scenarios of varying risk-benefit profiles.
At baseline, a majority in both the DD and control groups supported a policy of family consent for dementia research in all research scenarios. The support for a policy of family consent for surrogate-based research increased in the DD group, but not in the control group. The change in the DD group was maintained 1 month later. In the DD group, there were transient changes in attitudes from surrogate or self-perspectives. In the control group, there were no changes from baseline in attitude toward surrogate consent from any perspective.
Intensive, balanced, and accurate education, along with peer deliberation provided by democratic deliberation, led to a sustained increase in support for a societal policy of family consent in dementia research among those responsible for dementia patients.
涉及痴呆症失能者的研究涉及复杂的科学、法律和伦理问题,使得传统的调查研究普通民众对这类研究的伦理看法变得具有挑战性。因此,我们评估了民主审议(DD)对负责痴呆症患者的人的观点的影响。
178 名社区招募的痴呆症患者的护理人员或主要决策者被随机分配到全天 DD 会议组或对照组。用于 DD 会议的教育材料由跨学科咨询小组进行平衡和准确性审查。我们从社会政策角度以及从为亲人或为自己做出决定的更个人化的角度评估了家庭代理人同意进行痴呆症研究(“代理人研究”)的可接受性,从四个风险-效益不同的研究情景评估了从社会政策角度以及从为亲人或为自己做出决定的更个人化的角度评估了家庭代理人同意进行痴呆症研究(“代理人研究”)的可接受性,从四个风险-效益不同的研究情景评估了从社会政策角度以及从为亲人或为自己做出决定的更个人化的角度评估了家庭代理人同意进行痴呆症研究(“代理人研究”)的可接受性,从四个风险-效益不同的研究情景评估了从社会政策角度以及从为亲人或为自己做出决定的更个人化的角度评估了家庭代理人同意进行痴呆症研究(“代理人研究”)的可接受性。
在基线时,DD 组和对照组中的大多数人都支持在所有研究情景中都采用家庭同意进行痴呆症研究的政策。DD 组对家庭同意进行代理人研究的政策的支持增加,但对照组没有增加。DD 组的变化在 1 个月后仍保持不变。在 DD 组中,从代理人或自我的角度来看,态度有短暂的变化。在对照组中,从任何角度来看,代理人同意的态度都没有从基线开始改变。
通过民主审议提供的密集、平衡和准确的教育以及同伴审议,导致负责痴呆症患者的人对痴呆症研究中家庭同意的社会政策的持续支持增加。