Antommaria Armand H Matheny, Brothers Kyle B, Myers John A, Feygin Yana B, Aufox Sharon A, Brilliant Murray H, Conway Pat, Fullerton Stephanie M, Garrison Nanibaa' A, Horowitz Carol R, Jarvik Gail P, Li Rongling, Ludman Evette J, McCarty Catherine A, McCormick Jennifer B, Mercaldo Nathaniel D, Myers Melanie F, Sanderson Saskia C, Shrubsole Martha J, Schildcrout Jonathan S, Williams Janet L, Smith Maureen E, Clayton Ellen Wright, Holm Ingrid A
a Ethics Center , Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.
b Department of Pediatrics , University of Cincinnati College of Medicine.
AJOB Empir Bioeth. 2018 Jul-Sep;9(3):128-142. doi: 10.1080/23294515.2018.1505783. Epub 2018 Sep 21.
The factors influencing parents' willingness to enroll their children in biobanks are poorly understood. This study sought to assess parents' willingness to enroll their children, and their perceived benefits, concerns, and information needs under different consent and data-sharing scenarios, and to identify factors associated with willingness.
This large, experimental survey of patients at the 11 eMERGE Network sites used a disproportionate stratified sampling scheme to enrich the sample with historically underrepresented groups. Participants were randomized to receive one of three consent and data-sharing scenarios.
In total, 90,000 surveys were mailed and 13,000 individuals responded (15.8% response rate). 5737 respondents were parents of minor children. Overall, 55% (95% confidence interval 50-59%) of parents were willing to enroll their youngest minor child in a hypothetical biobank; willingness did not differ between consent and data-sharing scenarios. Lower educational attainment, higher religiosity, lower trust, worries about privacy, and attitudes about benefits, concerns, and information needs were independently associated with less willingness to allow their child to participate. Of parents who were willing to participate themselves, 25% were not willing to allow their child to participate. Being willing to participate but not willing to allow one's child to participate was independently associated with multiple factors, including race, lower educational attainment, lower annual household income, public health care insurance, and higher religiosity.
Fifty-five percent of parents were willing to allow their youngest minor child to participate in a hypothetical biobank. Building trust, protecting privacy, and addressing attitudes may increase enrollment and diversity in pediatric biobanks.
影响父母让孩子加入生物样本库意愿的因素尚不清楚。本研究旨在评估父母让孩子加入的意愿,以及他们在不同的知情同意和数据共享情况下所感知到的益处、担忧和信息需求,并确定与意愿相关的因素。
这项针对11个eMERGE网络站点患者的大型实验性调查采用了不成比例的分层抽样方案,以增加历史上代表性不足群体的样本量。参与者被随机分配接受三种知情同意和数据共享情况之一。
总共邮寄了90000份调查问卷,13000人回复(回复率为15.8%)。5737名受访者是未成年子女的父母。总体而言,55%(95%置信区间50-59%)的父母愿意让他们最小的未成年子女加入一个假设的生物样本库;在知情同意和数据共享情况下,意愿没有差异。较低的教育程度、较高的宗教信仰、较低的信任度、对隐私的担忧以及对益处、担忧和信息需求的态度与允许孩子参与的意愿较低独立相关。在愿意自己参与的父母中,25%不愿意让他们的孩子参与。愿意参与但不愿意让自己的孩子参与与多种因素独立相关,包括种族、较低的教育程度、较低的家庭年收入、公共医疗保险和较高的宗教信仰。
55%的父母愿意让他们最小的未成年子女参与一个假设的生物样本库。建立信任、保护隐私和解决态度问题可能会增加儿科生物样本库的入组率和多样性。