How parents and practitioners experience research without prior consent (deferred consent) for emergency research involving children with life threatening conditions: a mixed method study
Published 2015 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
How parents and practitioners experience research without prior consent (deferred consent) for emergency research involving children with life threatening conditions: a mixed method study
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
BMJ Open
Volume 5, Issue 9, Pages e008522
Publisher
BMJ
Online
2015-09-19
DOI
10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008522
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Deferred Consent for Randomized Controlled Trials in Emergency Care Settings
- (2015) K. Harron et al. PEDIATRICS
- Patients’ perceived purpose of clinical informed consent: Mill’s individual autonomy model is preferred
- (2014) Muhammad M Hammami et al. BMC Medical Ethics
- Information disclosure in clinical informed consent: “reasonable” patient’s perception of norm in high-context communication culture
- (2014) Muhammad M Hammami et al. BMC Medical Ethics
- Death, bereavement and randomised controlled trials (BRACELET): a methodological study of policy and practice in neonatal and paediatric intensive care trials
- (2014) Claire Snowdon et al. HEALTH TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT
- Medical research in emergency research in the European Union member states: tensions between theory and practice
- (2014) Erwin J. O. Kompanje et al. INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE
- Patient information leaflets (PILs) for UK randomised controlled trials: a feasibility study exploring whether they contain information to support decision making about trial participation
- (2014) Katie Gillies et al. Trials
- Doing challenging research studies in a patient-centred way: a qualitative study to inform a randomised controlled trial in the paediatric emergency care setting
- (2014) Kerry Woolfall et al. BMJ Open
- Waiver of Informed Consent in Pediatric Resuscitation Research: A Systematic Review
- (2013) Mohamed Eltorki et al. ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE
- How experience makes a difference: practitioners’ views on the use of deferred consent in paediatric and neonatal emergency care trials
- (2013) Kerry Woolfall et al. BMC Medical Ethics
- ‘The Words Will Pass with the Blowing Wind’: Staff and Parent Views of the Deferred Consent Process, with Prior Assent, Used in an Emergency Fluids Trial in Two African Hospitals
- (2013) Sassy Molyneux et al. PLoS One
- Parents’ Agendas in Paediatric Clinical Trial Recruitment Are Different from Researchers’ and Often Remain Unvoiced: A Qualitative Study
- (2013) Kerry Woolfall et al. PLoS One
- What can qualitative research do for randomised controlled trials? A systematic mapping review
- (2013) A O'Cathain et al. BMJ Open
- Are Two Drugs Better Than One For Acute Agitation? A Discussion On Black Box Warnings, Waiver of Informed Consent, and the Ethics of Enrolling Impaired Subjects in Clinical Trials
- (2012) Stephanie A. Eucker et al. ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE
- Supporting positive experiences and sustained participation in clinical trials: looking beyond information provision
- (2012) Kate Gillies et al. JOURNAL OF MEDICAL ETHICS
- The Prevention and Treatment of Missing Data in Clinical Trials
- (2012) Roderick J. Little et al. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE
- What Parents of Children Who Have Received Emergency Care Think about Deferring Consent in Randomised Trials of Emergency Treatments: Postal Survey
- (2012) Carrol Gamble et al. PLoS One
- The Concept of Voluntary Consent
- (2011) Robert M. Nelson et al. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BIOETHICS
- Interventions to reduce central venous catheter-associated infections in children: which ones are beneficial?
- (2011) Quen Mok et al. INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE
- Emergency research in children: options for ethical recruitment
- (2011) J. Brierley et al. JOURNAL OF MEDICAL ETHICS
- Effect of consent rituals on mortality in emergency care research
- (2011) Ian Roberts et al. LANCET
- The Decision Making Control Instrument to Assess Voluntary Consent
- (2011) Victoria A. Miller et al. MEDICAL DECISION MAKING
- Use of deferred consent for severely ill children in a multi-centre phase III trial
- (2011) Kathryn Maitland et al. Trials
- Parental comprehension and satisfaction in informed consent in paediatric clinical trials: a prospective study on childhood leukaemia
- (2010) H. Chappuy et al. ARCHIVES OF DISEASE IN CHILDHOOD
- SYMBIOTIC EMPIRICAL ETHICS: A PRACTICAL METHODOLOGY
- (2010) LUCY FRITH BIOETHICS
- How do parents experience being asked to enter a child in a randomised controlled trial?
- (2009) Valerie Shilling et al. BMC Medical Ethics
- Clinical research without consent in adults in the emergency setting: a review of patient and public views
- (2008) Jan Lecouturier et al. BMC Medical Ethics
Add your recorded webinar
Do you already have a recorded webinar? Grow your audience and get more views by easily listing your recording on Peeref.
Upload NowBecome a Peeref-certified reviewer
The Peeref Institute provides free reviewer training that teaches the core competencies of the academic peer review process.
Get Started