Background
Informed
consent as stipulated in regulatory human research guidelines requires that a
volunteer is well-informed about what will happen to them in a trial. However
researchers are faced with a challenge of how to ensure that a volunteer
agreeing to take part in a clinical trial is truly informed. We conducted a
qualitative study among volunteers taking part in two HIV clinical trials in
Uganda to find out how they defined informed consent and their perceptions of
the trial procedures, study information and interactions with the research team.
Methods
Between
January and December 2012, 23 volunteers who had been in the two trials for
over 6 months, consented to be interviewed about their experience in the
trial three times over a period of nine months. They also took part in focus
group discussions. Themes informed by study research questions and emerging
findings were used for content analysis.
Results
Volunteers
defined the informed consent process in terms of their individual welfare. Only
two of the volunteers reported having referred during the trial to the
participant information sheets given at the start of the trial. Volunteers
remembered the information they had been given at the start of the trial on
procedures that involved drawing blood and urine samples but not information
about study design and randomisation. Volunteers said that they had understood
the purpose of the trial. They said that signing a consent form showed that
they had consented to take part in the trial but they also described it as
being done to protect the researcher in case a volunteer later experienced side
effects.
Conclusion
Volunteers
pay more attention during the consent process to procedures requiring
biological tests than to study design issues. Trust built between volunteers
and the research team could enhance the successful conduct of clinical trials
by allowing for informal discussions to identify and review volunteers’
perceptions. These results point to the need for researchers to view informed
consent as a process rather than an event.
Full article at: http://goo.gl/N43pgl
1Medical Research Council/Uganda Virus
Research Institute (MRC/UVRI) Uganda Research Unit on AIDS, Kampala, Uganda
2University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK
3London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine, London, UK
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