Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
BMC Med Ethics. 2013 Nov 6;14:45. doi: 10.1186/1472-6939-14-45.
In 2008 UK legislation was amended to enable the use of deferred consent for paediatric emergency care (EC) trials in recognition of the practical and ethical difficulties of obtaining prospective consent in an emergency situation. However, ambiguity about how to make deferred consent acceptable to parents, children and practitioners remains. In particular, little is known about practitioners' views and experiences of seeking deferred consent in this setting.
As part of a wider study investigating consent methods in paediatric emergency care trials (called CONNECT), a 20 item online questionnaire was sent by email inviting practitioners (doctors and nurses) who were involved in talking with families about children's and young people's (aged 0-16 years) participation in UK EC trials. To ensure those with and without experience of deferred consent were included, practitioners were sampled using a combination of purposive and snowball sampling methods. Simple descriptive statistics were used to analyse the quantitative data, whilst the constant comparative method was used to analyse qualitative data. Elements of a symbiotic empirical ethics approach was used to integrate empirical evidence and bioethical literature to explore the data and draw practice orientated conclusions.
Views on deferred consent differed depending upon whether or not practitioners were experienced in this consent method. Practitioners who had no experience of deferred consent reported negative perceptions of this consent method; these practitioners were concerned about the impact that deferred consent would have upon the parent-practitioner relationship. In contrast, practitioners experienced in deferred consent described how families had been receptive to the consent method, if conducted sensitively and in a time appropriate manner. Experienced practitioners also described how deferred consent had improved recruitment, parental decision-making capacity and parent-practitioner relationships in the emergency care setting.
The views of practitioners with first-hand experience of deferred consent should be considered in the design and ethical review of future paediatric EC trials; the design and ethical review of such trials should not solely be informed by the beliefs of those without experience of using deferred consent. Further research involving parents and children is required to inform practitioner training and normative guidance on the use and appropriateness of deferred consent in emergency settings.
2008 年,英国立法修正案允许在儿科急救护理(EC)试验中使用延期同意,以承认在紧急情况下获得前瞻性同意的实际和伦理困难。然而,如何使延期同意得到父母、儿童和医务人员的认可仍然存在歧义。特别是,对于在这种情况下寻求延期同意的医务人员的观点和经验知之甚少。
作为一项研究儿科急救护理试验中同意方法的更广泛研究(称为 CONNECT)的一部分,通过电子邮件向参与与家庭讨论儿童和青少年(年龄 0-16 岁)参与英国 EC 试验的医务人员(医生和护士)发送了一份 20 项在线问卷。为了确保包括有和没有延期同意经验的医务人员,使用有目的和滚雪球抽样方法相结合的方法对医务人员进行抽样。使用简单的描述性统计来分析定量数据,同时使用恒定性比较方法来分析定性数据。共生实证伦理方法的元素被用来整合实证证据和生物伦理文献,以探索数据并得出面向实践的结论。
对延期同意的看法因医务人员是否有这种同意方法的经验而有所不同。没有延期同意经验的医务人员对这种同意方法的看法负面;这些医务人员担心延期同意会对父母-医务人员关系产生影响。相比之下,有延期同意经验的医务人员描述了如果以敏感和适当的方式进行,家庭对同意方法的接受程度。有经验的医务人员还描述了延期同意如何改善在急救环境中的招募、父母的决策能力和父母-医务人员关系。
在设计和伦理审查未来的儿科 EC 试验时,应考虑有第一手延期同意经验的医务人员的观点;这种试验的设计和伦理审查不应仅仅由没有使用延期同意经验的人的信念来决定。需要进行涉及父母和儿童的进一步研究,以为在紧急情况下使用延期同意的培训和规范指南提供信息。