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The Process of Informed Consent. Amy Blakeslee, BS, CIP, CCRP HIC Lead Coordinator Yale University School of Medicine. What is the HIC?. Institutional Review Board (Called HIC-Human Investigation Committee at Yale)
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The Process of Informed Consent Amy Blakeslee, BS, CIP, CCRP HIC Lead Coordinator Yale University School of Medicine
What is the HIC? Institutional Review Board (Called HIC-Human Investigation Committee at Yale) Committee whose primary responsibility is to protect the rights and welfare of human research participants. Governed by Federal Regulations (OHRP and FDA) Also by Belmont Report (Ethical Principles of Justice, Beneficence and Respect for Persons)
What is Informed Consent? • Example of Ethical Principle of Respect for Persons • Not a document, but a process • Starts at initial contact (e.g. recruitment)
Continues through study participation • an informed participant is better able to adhere to the protocol and therefore provide evaluable data • research staff members are obligated to share any new information related to subject’s participation (i.e. newly identified side effects, etc)
Informed Consent The Document
All subjects must receive a copy of the ICF document for their records • Many participants will refer back to it or take it to show to a loved one • USE THE CORRECT (HIC approved!) VERSION • NO crossing out/white out—no changes of ANY type without HIC approval
Written/signed consent may be waived under certain circumstances—this must be approved by HIC on a case-by-case basis • Investigators must keep a copy of the signed consent document for their records (in a secure location)
Elements-Required by Federal Regulations and HIC policy (see Yale template handout) • Involves research • Explain purpose of research • Expected duration of participant’s involvement • Description of procedures (***In LAY terms***--see handout)
Elements-Required (cont’d) • Differentiate between experimental and standard procedures • Description of Risks/Discomforts • Description of Benefits (**Does NOT include Payments to Subjects) • Disclose Alternatives
Elements-Required (cont’d) • Confidentiality Section • In Case of Injury • Whom to contact with questions • Voluntary Participation—free to withdraw at ANY time
Industry sponsored research • Sponsors usually provide a template to be used; however the HIC must approve the final version and it must follow the HIC guidelines • This is not a ‘contract’ between the participant and the company-both the document and process are meant to inform participants
Informed Consent The Process
Handing a participant the consent document and asking them to read and ask questions is NOT Informed Consent • Verify participant knows diagnosis before proceeding with process (If a treatment study)
Should be a discussion which covers what is contained in the document • Try to keep it short (people will tune out at a certain point) • Tailor presentation to audience. You may want to think about your most unsophisticated relative—what would you like them to know if THEY were the participant • Don’t assume people know jargon/acronyms
Participants should be given ample time to consider options, ask questions and be allowed to take the information home to consider options • Pay attention to verbal and non-verbal cues both by YOU and by the person
Verify person understands information presented • Consider giving a ‘quiz’ after explaining study and before participant signs
Consent Addendums • Very useful when new information has been identified • Used to provide currently enrolled subjects about new information (side effects, etc) • The Committees seem to be moving toward requiring an addendum • HIC has developed a template, available on our website
Minors • Under 18 cannot sign Consent form (Unless pregnant female consenting for research related to pregnancy or on fetus OR under 18 parent consenting for research on child) • Minors sign an assent form (should have separate assents for different age ranges eg-7-12, 13-17) • Parents sign permission form • Child declining participation trumps parent agreeing unless HIC determines child assent not required
Non-English • According to regulations, the document MUST be in a language understandable to the participant and must contain the same elements as English version—can be a ‘short form’ • Consent should be obtained by someone fluent in the participant’s language. • This should NOT be a family member
Non-English (cont’d) • Finalize the English version before having it translated. • Talk to the translator. • All translators listed on the HIC website must meet certain criteria.
Decisionally Impaired • May be cognitively impaired, unconscious, mentally disabled, temporarily impaired • Informed Consent discussion should happen with next of kin/surrogate OR legally authorized representative • When possible, participant’s assent should also be obtained—may be after the research related activities have occurred in the case of participants who are temporarily impaired
HIPAA RAF (Research Authorization Form) IS NOT a consent form • authorization to use and release Protected Health Information for research purposes records to those entities listed on the RAF • Consider using a Compound consent form which incorporates HIPAA language into consent form
Questions? • HIC website: http://info.med.yale.edu/hic/ • OHRP website: http://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/ • FDA website http://www.fda.gov/ • HIC 785-4688