Suppr超能文献

在一项涉及重症蛛网膜下腔出血患者的低风险研究中采用延迟同意。

Deferred consent in a minimal-risk study involving critically ill subarachnoid hemorrhage patients.

作者信息

Topolovec-Vranic Jane, Santos Marlene, Baker Andrew J, Smith Orla M, Burns Karen E A

出版信息

Can Respir J. 2014 Sep-Oct;21(5):293-6. doi: 10.1155/2014/719270. Epub 2014 Jun 10.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Alterations from first-party and surrogate decision-maker consent can enhance the feasibility of research involving critically ill patients.

OBJECTIVE

To describe the use of a deferred-consent model to enable participation of critically ill patients in a minimal-risk biomarker study.

METHODS

A prospective observational study was conducted in which serum biomarker samples were collected three times daily over the first 14 days following aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. Sample collection was initiated on intensive care unit admission and consent was obtained when research personnel could approach the patient or the patient's surrogate decision maker.

RESULTS

Twenty-seven patients were eligible for the study, of whom only five were capable of providing informed consent. Full consent was obtained for 21 (78%) patients through self- (n=4) and surrogate (n=17) consent. Partial consent or refusal (only permitting the collection of blood samples as a part of routine care or use of data) occurred in three patients. Among the 22 consents sought from surrogates, three (11%) refused participation. The refusals included the sickest patients in the cohort. Once consent was provided, no patient or surrogate withdrew consent before study completion.

DISCUSSION

Use of a deferred consent model enabled participation of critically ill patients in a minimal-risk biomarker study with no withdrawals.

CONCLUSIONS

Further research and enhanced awareness of the potential utility of hybrid models, including deferred consent in addition to patient or surrogate consent, in the conduct of low-risk and minimally interventional time-sensitive studies of critically ill patients are required.

摘要

引言

偏离第一方和替代决策者的同意可以提高涉及重症患者的研究的可行性。

目的

描述使用延迟同意模型以使重症患者参与一项低风险生物标志物研究。

方法

进行了一项前瞻性观察性研究,在动脉瘤性蛛网膜下腔出血后的前14天内,每天三次采集血清生物标志物样本。样本采集在重症监护病房入院时开始,当研究人员能够接触患者或患者的替代决策者时获得同意。

结果

27名患者符合研究条件,其中只有5名能够提供知情同意。通过自我同意(n = 4)和替代同意(n = 17)为21名(78%)患者获得了完全同意。3名患者出现部分同意或拒绝(仅允许作为常规护理的一部分采集血样或使用数据)。在向替代决策者寻求的22份同意中,3份(11%)拒绝参与。拒绝者包括队列中病情最严重的患者。一旦提供同意,没有患者或替代决策者在研究完成前撤回同意。

讨论

使用延迟同意模型使重症患者能够参与一项低风险生物标志物研究,且无退出情况。

结论

需要进一步研究并提高对混合模型潜在效用的认识,包括除患者或替代同意外的延迟同意,以开展针对重症患者的低风险、微创且对时间敏感的研究。

相似文献

本文引用的文献

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验