Consent Forms Clinical Trial
Official title:
Clinical Informed Consent Format Evaluation
This study evaluates the effectiveness of a patient-centered short written informed consent form and a patient-centered short video informed consent in a randomized controlled trial (control = traditional informed consent ). Primary outcome measures include critical knowledge acquisition, risk and benefit judgments, and desired enrollment in a hypothetical clinical trial. The investigators hypothesized that the patient-centered patient-designed consent forms (video and written format) would do as well as or outperform the traditional consent form on the primary outcomes.
Traditional informed consent documents tend to be lengthy and technical, often too dense to facilitate proper patient-engagement. In this study, the investigators test the effectiveness of a previously developed patient-centered, short informed consent document and a patient-centered, short informed animated consent video as compared to a lengthy traditional informed consent document for the same clinical condition (i.e. severe asthma) In this study, self-identified asthma patients, aged 18 or older, attending an experimental session in a university computer laboratory will be randomly assigned to read either the full informed consent document (control) or the short, patient-centered informed consent document or to view the short patient-centered informed consent video. Participants will also complete a follow-up survey at 1-week. The main outcome measures are: Engagement in the information (1=not at all engaged, 2=not very engaged, 3= somewhat engaged, 4=very engaged, 5=completely engaged). Intention to enroll in the clinical trial (1=definitely would not, 3=neutral, and 5=definitely would) Trial knowledge (12 multiple choice questions, e.g. ""When can [the participants] withdraw from the trial?") Trust in the clinical trial physician (Six questions beginning with, "If [the participant] decided to enroll in this study, how much would [the participant] trust Dr. Janet Taylor, the physician who is leading the study, to...") Perceived risks and benefits of the trial (Four questions, e.g. "Imagine that [the participant] enrolled in the clinical trial, how likely do [the participants] think it is that the drug would be more effective in treating [the participant's] asthma symptoms than an average asthma drug on the market?") The investigators hypothesize that the two experimental conditions will outperform the control condition on engagement and trial knowledge and would do as well as the control on the remaining outcome measures. ;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
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Completed |
NCT03416907 -
Informed Consent Formats by Information Preference and Priority
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N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04669483 -
Development, Piloting and Evaluation of an Evidence-based Informed Consent Form for Total Knee Arthroplasty
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