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: | ObjectiveTo 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.MethodsThis 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.ResultsTotal comprehension scores were higher in the multimodal versus the standard consent group (p? 0.001) and on the elements of benefits (p? 0.001), risks (p? 0.001), volunteerism (p? 0.012), results (p? 0.001), confidentiality (p? 0.004) and privacy (p < 0.001).ConclusionA multimodal consent and assessment presented sequentially on a touch-screen tablet were patient-centered enhancements to standard consent.Practice implicationsMultimodal standardization of delivery with improved readability may strengthen the informed consent process. |