Obtaining informed consent can be challenging in stressful and urgent circumstances. One example is when potential participants have recently had their child removed into care; intervention is urgent and mandatory whereas participation in associated research is voluntary. Using a nested qualitative study, we examined experiences of consent processes in a randomised controlled trial of a family assessment and intervention service for maltreated young children. Some potential participants found it difficult to use information; some believed consenting might influence the return of their child. In response to these ethical challenges, we propose reversing the typical process of securing consent, so that randomisation to an intervention occurs ...
Background: Questions have been asked about whether the process of obtaining informed consent from p...
Background: More effective recruitment strategies like alternative approaches to consent are needed ...
Objectives: To assess whether continuous consent, a process whereby information is given to research...
Obtaining informed consent can be challenging in stressful and urgent circumstances. One example is ...
Obtaining informed consent can be challenging in stressful and urgent circumstances. One example is ...
Treatments and interventions used to care for children in emergencies should be based on strong evid...
What do we mean by research without prior consent (deferred consent)? Emergency research with criti...
Objective Alternatives to prospective informed consent to enable children with life-threatening cond...
Informed consent is critical in research with children. Although much has been written about the nee...
Background: A challenge of conducting research in critically ill children is that the therapeutic wi...
BACKGROUND: There is limited experience in using deferred consent for studies involving children, wh...
BACKGROUND: Informed consent is considered a fundamental requirement for participation in trials, ye...
Children and young peoples' healthcare should be evidence-based yet many treatments are unlicensed o...
Background: Conducting clinical trials with pre-term or sick infants is important if care for this p...
Background: Questions have been asked about whether the process of obtaining informed consent from p...
Background: More effective recruitment strategies like alternative approaches to consent are needed ...
Objectives: To assess whether continuous consent, a process whereby information is given to research...
Obtaining informed consent can be challenging in stressful and urgent circumstances. One example is ...
Obtaining informed consent can be challenging in stressful and urgent circumstances. One example is ...
Treatments and interventions used to care for children in emergencies should be based on strong evid...
What do we mean by research without prior consent (deferred consent)? Emergency research with criti...
Objective Alternatives to prospective informed consent to enable children with life-threatening cond...
Informed consent is critical in research with children. Although much has been written about the nee...
Background: A challenge of conducting research in critically ill children is that the therapeutic wi...
BACKGROUND: There is limited experience in using deferred consent for studies involving children, wh...
BACKGROUND: Informed consent is considered a fundamental requirement for participation in trials, ye...
Children and young peoples' healthcare should be evidence-based yet many treatments are unlicensed o...
Background: Conducting clinical trials with pre-term or sick infants is important if care for this p...
Background: Questions have been asked about whether the process of obtaining informed consent from p...
Background: More effective recruitment strategies like alternative approaches to consent are needed ...
Objectives: To assess whether continuous consent, a process whereby information is given to research...