Manhas Kiran Pohar, Page Stacey, Dodd Shawn X, Letourneau Nicole, Ambrose Aleta, Cui Xinjie, Tough Suzanne C
Child Development Centre, c/o 2888 Shaganappi Trail NW, Calgary, AB, T3B 6A8, Canada.
MacKimmie Library Tower, 2500 University Drive Northwest, Calgary, AB, T2N 1N4, Canada.
Life Sci Soc Policy. 2016;12:1. doi: 10.1186/s40504-016-0034-6. Epub 2016 Jan 20.
Data sharing presents several challenges to the informed consent process. Unique challenges emerge when sharing pediatric or pregnancy-related data. Here, parent preferences for sharing non-biological data are examined.
Groups (n = 4 groups, 18 participants) and individual interviews (n = 19 participants) were conducted with participants from two provincial, longitudinal pregnancy cohorts (AOB and APrON). Qualitative content analysis was applied to transcripts of semi-structured interviews.
Participants were supportive of a broad, one-time consent model or a tiered consent model. These preferences were grounded in the perceived obligations for reciprocity and accuracy. Parents want reciprocity among participants, repositories and researchers regarding respect and trust. Furthermore, parents' worry about the interrelationships between the validity of the consent processes and secondary data use.
Though parent participants agree that their research data should be made available for secondary use, they believe their consent is still required. Given their understanding that obtaining and informed consent can be challenging in the case of secondary use, parents agreed that a broad, one-time consent model was acceptable, reducing the logistical burden while maintaining respect for their contribution. This broad model also maintained participant trust in the research and secondary use of their data. The broad, one-time model also reflected parents' perspectives surrounding child involvement in the consent process. The majority of parents felt decision made during childhood were the parents responsibility and should remain in parental purview until the child reaches the age of majority.
数据共享给知情同意程序带来了诸多挑战。在共享儿科或与妊娠相关的数据时会出现独特的挑战。在此,研究了父母对于共享非生物数据的偏好。
对来自两个省级纵向妊娠队列(AOB和APrON)的参与者进行了小组访谈(n = 4组,18名参与者)和个人访谈(n = 19名参与者)。对半结构化访谈的记录进行了定性内容分析。
参与者支持广泛的一次性同意模式或分层同意模式。这些偏好基于对互惠和准确性的认知义务。父母希望参与者、存储库和研究人员之间在尊重和信任方面相互对等。此外,父母担心同意程序的有效性与二次数据使用之间的相互关系。
尽管参与研究的父母同意其研究数据应可供二次使用,但他们认为仍需要他们的同意。鉴于他们理解在二次使用情况下获得知情同意可能具有挑战性,父母同意广泛的一次性同意模式是可以接受的,这在减轻后勤负担的同时,保持了对他们贡献的尊重。这种广泛的模式还维持了参与者对研究及其数据二次使用的信任。广泛的一次性模式也反映了父母对于儿童参与同意程序的观点。大多数父母认为童年时期做出的决定是父母的责任,在孩子成年之前应仍由父母掌控。