Abstract

BackgroundMedical research studies are becoming increasingly important for optimizing the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of illnesses. Participation in research studies can have many benefits for patients. In randomized and controlled clinical studies, they can receive the best possible medical care currently available. However, only a small proportion of patients nowadays are treated within the framework of medical research. The primary endpoint of this study was to discover what level of knowledge patients have about clinical studies and how they currently perceive them, in order to identify ways of optimizing the information provided about studies from the patients’ point of view.MethodsThe study included 2546 patients (breast cancer 21.6 %, gynecological cancer 8.3 %, obstetrics 32.7 %, endometriosis 7.8 %, fertility treatment 3.2 %, other benign gynecological illnesses 19.2 %, no information for 7.2 %) in the outpatient clinic (45.2 %) and in the in-patient sector (54.8 %) at the Department of Gynecology at Erlangen University Hospital and associated centers. In the single-center study, conducted between January 2011 and January 2012, the patients were asked about their level of knowledge regarding the background to medical research studies and the ways in which they are carried out and used. The patients were also asked how they perceived medical studies and how they thought study conditions might be optimized. The three-page questionnaire was included in the feedback sheet received by patients as part of the hospital’s quality management system.ResultsAs a whole, the group only had moderate knowledge about clinical studies. A majority of the respondents considered that studies were valuable (91.6 %), but only a few were also willing to take part in them (58.4 %). Knowledge and willingness to participate strongly depended on age (P < 0.001), educational level (P < 0.001) and patient group (P < 0.001). Most patients would prefer to decide about participating in studies through a discussion with their outpatient physicians.ConclusionsThe information that patients have about clinical studies affects whether they participate in them. It is therefore extremely important for patients to be well informed, for their anxieties about participation to be relieved, and for the benefits of participation to be explained to them.

Highlights

  • Medical research studies are becoming increasingly important for optimizing the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of illnesses

  • This study shows that women with gynecological diseases have only moderate knowledge about clinical studies

  • Their knowledge and willingness to participate in research studies are strongly dependent on age (P < 0.001), educational level (P < 0.001), and presenting condition (P < 0.001)

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Summary

Introduction

Medical research studies are becoming increasingly important for optimizing the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of illnesses. Medical research studies are today the gold standard for the development of new types of medical procedure, treatments, drugs, etc. They help to transfer the latest scientific discoveries to clinical practice. They have great potential benefits for patients who participate in them, and thanks to strict standards and regulations they have very high safety requirements. Care for participants in a clinical study is much more intensive, and more information is provided to the patient about the causes and management of disease; this leads to an additional positive psychological effect [3]. Participation rates in clinical studies are extremely low [4]

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