Abstract

BackgroundInformed consent is often cited as the “cornerstone” of research ethics. Its intent is that participants enter research voluntarily, with an understanding of what their participation entails. Despite agreement on the necessity to obtain informed consent in research, opinions vary on the threshold of disclosure necessary and the best method to obtain consent. We aimed to investigate Australian researchers’ views on, and their experiences with, obtaining informed consent.MethodsSemi-structured interviews were conducted with 23 researchers from NSW institutions, working in various fields of research. Interviews were analysed and coded to identify themes.ResultsResearchers reported that consent involved information disclosure, understanding and a voluntary decision. They emphasised the variability of consent interactions, which were dependent on potential participants’ abilities and interests, study complexity and context. All researchers reported providing written information to potential participants, yet questioned the readability and utility of this information. The majority reported using signed consent forms to ‘operationalise’ consent and reported little awareness of, and lack of support in implementing more dynamic informed consent procedures, such as verbal informed consent, that was fit for the purposes of their studies. Views on Human Research Ethics Committees (HRECs) varied. Some reported inconsistent, arduous inputs on the information form and consent process. Others expressed reliance on HRECs for guidance, viewing them as institutional safeguards.ConclusionsThis study highlights the importance of transparent relationships, both between researchers and participants, and between researchers and HRECs. Where the relationship with study participants was reported as more robust, researchers felt that they were better able to ensure participants made better, more informed decisions. Where the relationship with HRECs was reported as more robust, researchers were more likely to view them as institutional safeguards, rather than as bureaucratic hindrances. Conscientious and mindful researchers are paramount to ensuring the procedure accommodates individual requirements. This study advocates that when designing ethical informed consent practices, researchers should be integrated as autonomous players with a positive input on the process, rather than, in the worst case, predatory recruiters to be curtailed by information forms and oversight.

Highlights

  • Informed consent, in the context of research, is described as a ‘voluntary choice ... based on sufficient information and adequate understanding of both the proposed research and the implications of participating in it’ [1]

  • This study highlights the importance of transparent relationships, both between researchers and participants, and between researchers and Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC)

  • Where the relationship with HRECs was reported as more robust, researchers were more likely to view them as institutional safeguards, rather than as bureaucratic hindrances

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Summary

Introduction

In the context of research, is described as a ‘voluntary choice ... based on sufficient information and adequate understanding of both the proposed research and the implications of participating in it’ [1]. Based on sufficient information and adequate understanding of both the proposed research and the implications of participating in it’ [1]. It is often cited as the ‘cornerstone of research ethics’, [2] and the act of obtaining informed consent is seen as fundamental in satisfying ethical research principles of respect, beneficence and justice [3]. There is little consensus regarding the threshold of sufficient understanding for consent to be valid [4, 5], or the ideal way to obtain informed consent [6, 7]. We aimed to investigate Australian researchers’ views on, and their experiences with, obtaining informed consent

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