For some perinatal trials, parents can be asked to make important decisions about trial participation within limited timeframes in highly stressful circumstances. This qualitative study explores the pace of decision-making for 78 parents associated with one or more of four such trials in the UK. The themes associated with rapid decisions were concern for their baby, reactions to staff, and perceptions of the benefits and risks associated with the trial. Those who took longer to decide whether or not to participate often described similar emotions to those who made rapid decisions, but their slower decisions were because more time was available, they wanted further discussion or they found the decision particularly difficult. The majority of...
Ensuring parents make an informed decision about their child’s participation in a clinical trial is ...
BACKGROUND: It is considered to be a fundamental ethical premise of human experimentation, that it s...
BACKGROUND: Neurodevelopment and growth are primary concerns when neonates are born extremely premat...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the attitudes of neonatologists to trial related perinatal postmortem examina...
Background: As the number of randomised controlled trials of medicines for children increases, it b...
Objective: To explore parents’ perceptions and experience of being approached for enrolment of their...
BACKGROUND: Interviews with neonatologists in a related study had revealed a degree of discomfort wi...
The objective of the study was to explore parental experiences of being offered participation in a ...
Background: Comparative effectiveness randomised controlled trials are powerful tools to resolve unc...
Studies exploring parents' trial experiences generally relate to their understanding of the consent ...
Perinatal postmortem rates are declining world wide. In the United Kingdom, perinatal pathology has ...
Ensuring parents make an informed decision about their child's participation in a clinical trial is ...
Background: The ethical basis of randomised controlled trials is equipoise, whether at the collectiv...
OBJECTIVES: To investigate recruitment processes across a range of clinical trials and from the pers...
OBJECTIVE To explore parents' perceptions of their infants' participation in randomized control t...
Ensuring parents make an informed decision about their child’s participation in a clinical trial is ...
BACKGROUND: It is considered to be a fundamental ethical premise of human experimentation, that it s...
BACKGROUND: Neurodevelopment and growth are primary concerns when neonates are born extremely premat...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the attitudes of neonatologists to trial related perinatal postmortem examina...
Background: As the number of randomised controlled trials of medicines for children increases, it b...
Objective: To explore parents’ perceptions and experience of being approached for enrolment of their...
BACKGROUND: Interviews with neonatologists in a related study had revealed a degree of discomfort wi...
The objective of the study was to explore parental experiences of being offered participation in a ...
Background: Comparative effectiveness randomised controlled trials are powerful tools to resolve unc...
Studies exploring parents' trial experiences generally relate to their understanding of the consent ...
Perinatal postmortem rates are declining world wide. In the United Kingdom, perinatal pathology has ...
Ensuring parents make an informed decision about their child's participation in a clinical trial is ...
Background: The ethical basis of randomised controlled trials is equipoise, whether at the collectiv...
OBJECTIVES: To investigate recruitment processes across a range of clinical trials and from the pers...
OBJECTIVE To explore parents' perceptions of their infants' participation in randomized control t...
Ensuring parents make an informed decision about their child’s participation in a clinical trial is ...
BACKGROUND: It is considered to be a fundamental ethical premise of human experimentation, that it s...
BACKGROUND: Neurodevelopment and growth are primary concerns when neonates are born extremely premat...