Cognitive Dysfunction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Characteristics and Outcomes of a Capacity-to-Consent Assessment Service
Background: Many medical conditions such as Alzheimer s disease limit the ability of people to think clearly. For medical scientists to best study these medical conditions, they need to enroll some people who may not be able to consent to participate in research on their own. Before these individuals enroll in research it is important to assess whether they are able to consent or whether someone else will need to consent for them. The NIH Clinical Center has a team that performs these assessments. A team like this can be useful for two reasons. First, it helps to protect the rights of research participants. Second, it makes it possible to study medical conditions that could not be studied otherwise. In this study we will look back at the records of the NIH Clinical Center team to review the process and results of these assessments. We expect to learn how the capacity assessments were done. We will learn what factors make people more or less able to consent. We will learn who consented for the research participants when they could not consent on their own, for example a spouse or an adult child. These results are likely to be useful to other researchers who wish to study diseases that limit cognitive ability. Objective: To study the process and outcomes of capacity assessments of people who may not be able to consent to research. Eligibility: People of all ages, genders, races, ethnicities, and languages whose ability to consent was assessed at the NIH Clinical Center at some time during the years 1999-2016. Design: This study will only review existing records. There will not be any active participants. Records will be reviewed for research only. This will take place in the Clinical Center. It will be done by staff of the Department of Bioethics and the Human Subjects Protection Unit (HSPU). The study will collect data from the Bioethics Consult database. It will also collect data from HSPU records. Researchers will look at demographic data. They will look at details of capacity evaluations. Personal data will not be extracted from existing records.
Objective: To characterize the process and outcomes of capacity assessments of individuals who may be unable to consent to participate in research. Study population: all individuals who came to the NIH Clinical Center for possible enrollment in research whose capacity to consent or assent was evaluated by the Bioethics Consultation Service (BCS), the Human Subjects Protection Unit (HSPU), or the Ability to Consent Assessment Team (ACAT), and all surrogate decision makers of individuals who were unable to consent and were allowed by protocol to give surrogate consent. Design: Retrospective record review Outcome measures: The primary outcome measure will be whether prospective research participants were judged to be able to consent or not. Secondary measures will include: whether the consulting team considered it ethically acceptable to enroll the participant in research; how consent was obtained for doing so; and descriptive features of the consults such as the Institute that requested the consult, protocols for which consults were requested, and diseases that prompted capacity assessments, among other descriptive characteristics. ;
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