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Improving quality of the informed consent process: Developing an easy-to-read,multimodal, patient-centered format in a real-world setting
Authors:Karen A. Lindsley
Affiliation:Manager, Coordinating Center and Regulatory Knowledge & Support (RKS), Georgia Clinical &Translational Science Alliance (Georgia CTSA), Emory University, 1599 Clifton Rd NE; Suite 4.355, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA
Abstract:

Objective

To develop a patient-centered informed consent and assessment tool written at a 6th grade-level that is multimodal, affordable, transportable, and readily modifiable for protocol updates.

Methods

This quality improvement initiative was performed in two phases on an actively-recruiting study at a pediatric diabetes clinic. In phase I, 38 volunteers underwent the standard-paper consent process, a comprehension assessment and provided feedback. Using feedback and the structure of the Plan-Do-Study-Act cycle a multimodal consent and assessment were developed. In phase II, volunteers were randomized to the standard (n?=?25) or the multimodal consent (n?=?25) and all completed the same comprehension assessment via touch-screen tablet. Primary outcomes were comparison of the individual and total comprehension assessment scores.

Results

Total comprehension scores were higher in the multimodal versus the standard consent group (p?p?p?p?p?p?p < 0.001).

Conclusion

A multimodal consent and assessment presented sequentially on a touch-screen tablet were patient-centered enhancements to standard consent.

Practice implications

Multimodal standardization of delivery with improved readability may strengthen the informed consent process.
Keywords:Informed consent  Multimodal  Patient-centered  Quality improvement  PDSA  Affordable  Real-world  Questionnaire development
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