Bagai Poonam, Sharma Pooja, Ansari Aala, Singh Nirbhay, Sharma Sonal, Singh Padam, Chougule Durga, Singh Manish Kumar, Singh Gargi, Singh Sanjeev
Pediatric Cancer Research Institute, CanKids KidsCan, New Delhi, IND.
Obstetrics and Gynecology, APAR Health, Gurugram, IND.
Cureus. 2024 Apr 17;16(4):e58454. doi: 10.7759/cureus.58454. eCollection 2024 Apr.
Background Clinical research presents a promising path for improving healthcare in contemporary India. Yet, researchers identify gaps in trust, awareness, as well as misconceptions about being a '"guinea pig." We proposed building the capacity of training patient advocacy groups (PAGs) in patient-centered clinical research and through them creating aware patients as research partners. Methodology Patient Advocates for Clinical Research (PACER) is a tiered program to share information and education about clinical research with PAGs. Tier one is a self-paced online learning course, followed by workshops on clinical research, Good Clinical Practice, research consent, case studies, and group discussions. Results A total of 20 PAGs represented by 48 participants, active in areas of pediatric cancer, breast cancer, multiple myeloma, type I diabetes, spinal muscular atrophy, sickle cell disease, and inflammatory bowel diseases, participated. Among 48 participants 30 successfully completed the online course (multiple-choice question evaluation score cut-off >70%), attaining an average score of 23.9 ± 2.1 out of 30. Overall, 48 participants attended workshop 1 and 45 workshop 2, with 140 participants joining the focus group discussion (FGD). An overall improvement of 9.4% (𝜒 = 46.173; p < 0.001) for workshop 1 and 8.2% (𝜒 = 25.412; p < 0.001) for workshop 2 was seen in knowledge gain about clinical research. The FGD raised issues such as misleading information from research teams, unethical recruitment, incomprehensible information sheets, and limited trial-related knowledge fostering fear of participation in clinical research. Conclusions Multimodal and tiered learning of clinical research such as that used by PACER has a good participatory and learning response from PAGs and may be further explored.
背景 临床研究为改善当代印度的医疗保健提供了一条充满希望的途径。然而,研究人员发现信任、意识方面存在差距,以及对成为 “实验对象” 存在误解。我们提议培养患者倡导团体(PAGs)开展以患者为中心的临床研究的能力,并通过它们培养有认知的患者成为研究伙伴。方法 临床研究患者倡导者(PACER)是一个分层项目,旨在与患者倡导团体分享有关临床研究的信息和教育。第一层是一个自主学习的在线课程,随后是关于临床研究、良好临床实践、研究同意书、案例研究和小组讨论的研讨会。结果 共有20个患者倡导团体,由48名参与者代表,活跃于儿童癌症、乳腺癌、多发性骨髓瘤、I型糖尿病、脊髓性肌萎缩症、镰状细胞病和炎症性肠病领域,参与了研究。在48名参与者中,30人成功完成了在线课程(多项选择题评估分数截止值>70%),在满分30分中平均得分为23.9±2.1分。总体而言,48名参与者参加了研讨会1,45名参加了研讨会2,140名参与者参加了焦点小组讨论(FGD)。在临床研究知识获取方面,研讨会1总体提高了9.4%(χ=46.173;p<0.001),研讨会2提高了8.2%(χ=25.412;p<0.001)。焦点小组讨论提出了一些问题,如研究团队提供的误导性信息、不道德的招募行为、难以理解的信息表,以及与试验相关的知识有限导致对参与临床研究的恐惧。结论 像PACER所采用的这种多模式、分层的临床研究学习方式,得到了患者倡导团体良好的参与和学习反馈,可能值得进一步探索。