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Here's
what you should ask before you decide to give your informed consent
to research.
related link:
Advance Directive
Re: Research
You Have a Right to Say "Yes" or "No"
A 1999 report by the Institute of Medicine (IOM), "To Err is Human,"
brought to light the magnitude of preventable deaths resulting from
medical errors The IOM report indicated that as many as 44,000 to
98,000 people die in hospitals each year as the result of medical
errors. On March 14, 2002, the Joint Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) launched a national campaign,
"SPEAK UP," encouraging patients to take an active role
in their healthcare by becoming active, involved, and informed participants.
http://www.jcaho.org/news_frm.html
The ALLIANCE FOR HUMAN RESEARCH PROTECTION (AHRP) is launching a
similar campaign to help ordinary citizens protect themselves from harmful,
or unwanted medical research.
AHRP is urging all people who are asked to participate in a clinical
trial to take an active role in protecting themselves from preventable
harmful adverse consequences.
Research involves greater risks than standard treatment therefore
caution and precautions are advisable. AHRP urges anyone considering
taking part in a research project to become informed, to speak up, and
to ask the questions suggested below.
The doctor conducting the project should provide the answers
in writing.
AHRP
agrees with the advice JCAHO gives patients: "Don't be afraid to seek
a second opinion. If you are unsure about the nature of your illness
and the best treatment, consult with one or two additional specialists.
The more information you have about the options available to you, the
more confident you will be in the decisions made."
AHRP
urges you to obtain full information about the risks and possible benefits,
if any, before signing any consent to research.
Medical researchers
do not always inform you (or your family) about the nature of the known
and foreseeable risks, discomfort, and possible adverse consequences
of medical research. We therefore suggest that anyone considering taking
part in a research project should obtain full information, then seek
an independent opinion from a doctor not affiliated with the research
team to help you make an informed decision.
Before
signing any consent to research, you need to ask the following questions,
which the doctor conducting the research must answer in writing:
- What is the
purpose of the study and how will it affect my daily life? Will I have
to be hospitalized? For how long?
- Will this
experiment involve any painful or uncomfortable procedures? Will I have
to endure spinal taps, intravenous infusions? How many? Will I be deprived
of sleep?
- Who is sponsoring
and funding the study? Does my Doctor/Researcher or other staff affiliated
with the study get a "finders fee" to recruit patients?"
If so, what is the amount? Does my Doctor/Researcher or other staff
affiliated with the study own stock in the company that makes the drug/intervention
or serve as a paid consultant to the company? Will I be reimbursed for
expenses I incur while participating in the study, such as parking fees,
meals, pro-rated child expenses, etc?
- Does this
protocol include investigational drugs not approved by the FDA? What
are the known or potential risks and side effects?
- How many
other people have taken the drug before me? What happened to them? Did
anyone die? Ask to speak to someone who had participated in a similar
trial. They can tell you what to expect and what worked best for their
recovery.
- For purposes
of the research, do some patients get a new drug while others get a
sugar pill (placebo)? If I get a placebo, what is the benefit for me
from participating?
- Is this study
designed to benefit me by testing a product or procedure that has a
probability of improving my condition? Or, is it a non-therapeutic experiment
designed to learn about tolerance levels or the physiology of illness?
- Does the
study require that I stop taking all medications (drug "washouts")?
For how long? If my symptoms return and I'm uncomfortable, will I be
given a medication that helps me right away? Who is authorized to prescribe
such medications?
- Does this
study include drugs such as amphetamine, methylphenidate, ketamine,
or any other psychostimulant drug that is likely to induce psychosis
and worsen my condition? If yes, ask to talk to an independent physician
to discuss the potential risks and hazards involved.
- Who is responsible
for monitoring my well-being and to make sure proper safeguards are
being followed? Is there an independent doctor who is not connected
with the research team?
- Is there
a non-medical patient advocate assigned to help me? What authority does
that individual have? Can I have a family member or trusted friend as
an advocate?
- If the drugs
involved are FDA-approved, are they approved for my condition? Will
I be given the recommended dose? Ask for a photocopy of the Physicians
Desk Reference (PDR) discussing the risks and side effects of this medication.
- Are there
procedures that involve radiation (e.g., PET scans) in this study? If
yes, how many? Does the exposure conform to community safety levels
for radiation?
- What exactly
does the Informed Consent cover and for how long? Does it cover more
than one project? Is this an "umbrella" consent form that
will allow several procedures to be performed at the same time or successively?
- What if
I'm harmed or injured, who's responsible for my after-care? Are subjects
of research protected by an insurance policy? Will I get any compensation?
- What alternative
care / treatment is available to me if I don't chose to be a research
subject and what are the advantages and disadvantages of each?
- If the drugs
used prove to be beneficial to me, what assurance do I have that I will
continue to get the drugs after completing the study?
- If there
are therapeutic benefits from the study will my medical record indicate
these findings? Will my record be sent to my doctor to help guide his
decisions about my follow-up care? Will I (and my family) be informed
about these findings in writing?
- What follow-up
care is offered to those who complete a study? To those who drop out?
- Who is authorized
and available during non-business hours (e.g., at night, during a holiday,
or weekend) to help me if problems arise or should I wish to withdraw
from the research?
- Do I have
the right to my medical research records, and will they be sent upon
my request, to me or my doctor?
- Don't be
afraid to seek an independent second opinion. If you are unsure about
the nature of your illness and the best treatment, consult with one
or two additional specialists. The more information you have about the
options available to you, the more confident you will be in the decisions
made.
- Review informed
consent forms with your advocate or with an independent physician before
you sign them and make sure you understand exactly what you are agreeing
to.
An Informed Parent is a Responsible Parent
If you are asked
to give permission for research on your child, you might also want to
ask the following:
- What condition
does my child have and does it require medical intervention?
- Does a treatment
for this condition already exist?
- What are
the known unfavorable health outcomes of that condition if no treatment
is provided? Might my child outgrow the condition naturally without
medical intervention?
- Is this experiment
designed to test a treatment or to screen for a condition? (If there
is no treatment, then what's the point of screening and labeling a child?)
- Is the study
designed to benefit my child? How many children have benefited?
- Is there
a placebo control (dummy pill)? What's the chance my child will derive
no benefit?
- Does the
research involve more than minimal risk?
- Will my child
feel any pain or discomfort from any of the procedures? How will pain
be minimized?
- How many
other children have tested the treatment? What happened to them?
- What is
the probability that my child is likely to benefit directly from the
research or the procedures?
- How does
the degree and probability of harm from the research compare with of
the probability of risk from the condition?
- How many
of those recruited to test the experimental treatment (or procedure)
were children of the doctors testing the treatment? How many were the
children of those who approved the research? How many were the children
of drug company executives?
- Get an independent
second opinion about the alternative treatment possibilities, and ask
to speak to a family whose child had participated in a study such as
this to find out what to expect.
Click here to
read about
Children's Safety and Research Protection for Children.
Click to
read what former Senator John Glenn had to say about informed consent.
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