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A feasibility study of signed consent for the collection of patient identifiable information for a national paediatric clinical audit databa
http://www.100md.com 《英国医学杂志》 2005年第4期
     1 Paediatric Epidemiology Group, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9LN,2 Critical Care Group, School of Health and Related Research, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S1 4DA,3 Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 6TP,4 Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust, Leeds General Infirmary, Leeds LS1 3EX,5 Sheffield Children's NHS Trust, Sheffield S10 2TH,6 Newcastle General Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne NE4 6BE

    Abstract
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    Objectives To investigate the feasibility of obtaining signed consent for submission of patient identifiable data to a national clinical audit database and to identify factors influencing the consent process and its success.

    Design Feasibility study.

    Setting Seven paediatric intensive care units in England.

    Participants Parents/guardians of patients, or patients aged 12-16 years old, approached consecutively over three months for signed consent for submission of patient identifiable data to the national clinical audit database the Paediatric Intensive Care Audit Network (PICANet).
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    Main outcome measures The numbers and proportions of admissions for which signed consent was given, refused, or not obtained (form not returned or form partially completed but not signed), by age, sex, level of deprivation, ethnicity (South Asian or not), paediatric index of mortality score, length of hospital stay (days in paediatric intensive care).

    Results One unit did not start and one did not fully implement the protocol, so analysis excluded these two units. Consent was obtained for 182 of 422 admissions (43%) (range by unit 9% to 84%). Most (101/182; 55%) consents were taken by staff nurses. One refusal (0.2%) was received. Consent rates were significantly better for children who were more severely ill on admission and for hospital stays of six days or more, and significantly poorer for children aged 10-14 years. Long hospital stays and children aged 10-14 years remained significant in a stepwise regression model of the factors that were significant in the univariate model.
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    Conclusion Systematically obtaining individual signed consent for sharing patient identifiable information with an externally located clinical audit database is difficult. Obtaining such consent is unlikely to be successful unless additional resources are specifically allocated to training, staff time, and administrative support.

    Introduction

    The paediatric intensive care audit network (PICANet) was established in 2001 in collaboration with the Paediatric Intensive Care Society. This prospective clinical audit database of all admissions to paediatric intensive care units in England and Wales aims to identify evidence based best practice, facilitate resource planning, and study the epidemiology of paediatric critical illness (see www.picanet.org.uk). The Data Protection Act requires that patients give their consent for the disclosure of patient identifiable information for purposes not directly related to treatment, including external clinical audit.
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    In 2002-3, under section 60 of the Health and Social Care Act 2001 for England and Wales1 the independent statutory Patient Information Advisory Group granted PICANet temporary support for the collection of patient identifiable data without consent, on the condition that the viability of taking consent was assessed. We studied the feasibility of obtaining signed consent for submission of patient identifiable information to a national clinical audit. We tried to identify the characteristics of patients that might influence the likelihood of consent being given.
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    Methods and participants

    During May to July 2003 we collected the details of consecutive patients admitted to seven paediatric intensive care units in England that agreed to take part in the study. Staff in the units approached participants (parents or guardians) in a two stage process to obtain consent: first they provided a short oral explanation and an information sheet, then 24 hours later (or before discharge) they asked for signed consent. (For 12-16 year olds, the protocol allowed staff to approach either the parents/guardians or the children themselves, but none of the staff did approach the children.)
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    Numbers and proportions of patients for whom consent was obtained from parents or guardians of children admitted to five paediatric intensive care units in England in May and June 2003, by age, sex, level of deprivation, and illness severity

    We linked the data from returned consent forms to the PICANet database so that we could assess the proportion of admissions for which signed consent was given, refused, or not obtained for some reason (form not returned or form partially completed but not signed). To estimate the likelihood of gaining consent according to characteristics of the patient, each of the following were considered separately in a univariate approach: age, sex, level of deprivation (Townsend score derived from residential postcode), ethnicity (South Asian or not), illness severity (score on the paediatric index of mortality), and length of hospital stay (days in paediatric intensive care). We calculated odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals using logistic regression.
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    Results

    Owing to lack of staff resources, one unit did not start to implement and one did not fully implement the protocol. We excluded these two units from the analysis. All five remaining units reported that the process of gathering consent was labour intensive and they received no additional financial support for staff time. The table shows that consent was obtained for 182/422 admissions (43%) (range by unit 9% to 84%); of these, almost half (88) had some data missing but never the signature. Most (101/182; 55%) consents were taken by staff nurses. One refusal (0.2%) was received. For 239 admissions no approach for signature was made; 75 forms were returned unsigned and 164 forms were not returned. Consent rates were significantly better for children who were more severely ill on admission ( 1% on the paediatric index of mortality) and for hospital stays of six days or more, and significantly poorer for children aged 10-14 years. Long hospital stays and children aged 10-14 years remained significant in a stepwise regression model of the factors that were significant in the univariate model.
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    Discussion

    Our findings show that systematically obtaining individual signed consent for sharing patient identifiable information with an externally located clinical audit database is difficult. We suggest that obtaining such consent is unlikely to be successful unless additional resources are specifically allocated to training, staff time, and administrative support.

    The hospital most successful at gaining consent "missed" 16% of admissions, a level of incompleteness that would severely compromise the effective functioning of the Paediatric Intensive Care Audit Network as a tool for clinical governance and monitoring the effective delivery of care. The gaining of consent was unrelated to ethnicity or level of deprivation but was better for those who had longer hospital stays and was poorer for older children. The separate consent forms and leaflets that were available for children aged 12-16 may have been confusing for staff and may explain why no patients were approached. The extremely low refusal rate (< 1%) suggested that parents were willing to share patient identifiable data; no comparable information on parental consent seems to have been published.
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    Our results endorse the view that the logistics of obtaining consent in large multicentre studies presents substantial challenges requiring new approaches to the issue.2 The authors believe that, to ensure the best delivery of care and the benefits of audit and research, patients should be made aware of the important ways in which patient identifiable information gathered by the NHS is used.3 4

    What is already known on this topic

, 百拇医药     Little empirical evidence exists either on the feasibility of systematically obtaining individual signed consent for collecting patient identifiable information for non-therapeutic purposes or on patient characteristics that might affect whether consent is gained

    What this study adds

    The process of gaining consent is difficult and time consuming, and success varies widely across paediatric intensive care units
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    The process is unlikely to be successful unless extra resources are allocated to training, staff time, and administrative support

    This article was posted on bmj.com on 18 March 2005: http://bmj.com/cgi/doi/10.1136/bmj.38404.650208.AE

    The members of the PICANet Consent Study Group were PAMcK, SJ, MD, ND, BC, CS, Carolyn Boyles, Christine Mackerness, Michael Marsh, Gale Pearson. We thank all staff in each centre for their contribution to the project, especially Jon Smith and Mike Stafford; Darren Shickle for early discussions on the project; and Gill Ryder and Tim Chater for helping with data management.
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    Contributors: PAMcK, ESD, and GP are the principal investigators on the paediatric intensive care audit network (PICANet). PAMcK established the PICANet Consent Study Group and with SJ, ND, MD, BC, and CS organised the ethical approval and data collection and management. RP conducted the statistical analysis. PAMcK wrote the first draft of the paper and her coauthors provided comments. PAMcK is the guarantor.

    Funding: PICANet is financed by the Department of Health and the Health Commission Wales.
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    Competing interests: None declared.

    Ethical approval: Northern and Yorkshire Multi-Centre Research Ethics Committee.

    References

    Stationery Office. Health and Social Care Act. 2001. www.legislation.hmso.gov.uk/acts/acts2001/20010015.htm (accessed 23 February 2005).

    Willison DJ, Keshavjee K, Nair K, Goldsmith C, Holbrook AM, for the COMPETE investigators. Patients' consent preferences for research uses of information in electronic medical records: interview and survey data. BMJ 2003;326: 373-7.

    Verity C, Nicholl A. Consent, confidentiality, and the threat to public health surveillance. BMJ 2002;324: 1210-3.

    Coleman MP, Evans BG, Barrett G. Confidentiality and the public interest in medical research—will we ever get it right Clin Med 2003;3: 219-28., 百拇医药(Patricia A McKinney, Sama)