Consent and assent in paediatric research in low-income settings.

BACKGROUND: In order to involve children in the decision-making process about participation in medical research it is widely recommended that the child's assent be sought in addition to parental consent. However, the concept of assent is fraught with difficulties, resulting in confusion amo...

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Main Authors: Cheah, Phaik Yeong, Parker, Michael
Other Authors: Yeong, Phaik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/854
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spelling th-mahidol.8542023-03-30T16:17:08Z Consent and assent in paediatric research in low-income settings. Cheah, Phaik Yeong Parker, Michael Yeong, Phaik Mahidol University. Faculty of Tropical Medicine. Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit. Assent Children Consent Low-income setting Paediatric research Open Access article BACKGROUND: In order to involve children in the decision-making process about participation in medical research it is widely recommended that the child's assent be sought in addition to parental consent. However, the concept of assent is fraught with difficulties, resulting in confusion among researchers and ethics committees alike. DISCUSSION: In this paper, we outline the current international debate surrounding pediatric consent and assent, and its unique challenges arising in low-income settings. We go on to propose some key requirements for a fit-for-purpose assent model in these difficult settings. The paper recommends that children who are competent, that is, children who are judged to be able to understand and retain relevant information, weigh this information in making a mature judgment, come to a decision and communicate the decision, should be able to consent for themselves. Our proposal is that where the decision about whether to participate in a study is of comparable complexity to the decisions the child is used to making in other aspects of his or her life, it should be made by the child him or herself. The relevant level of complexity should be judged by local standards rather than standards of the developed world. In the paper we explore some of the practical challenges and counter arguments of implementing this proposal. As in high-income settings, we argue that in the case of children who are judged to lack this level of competence both parental consent and assent from the child should be sought and go on to define assent as involving the child to the extent compatible to his or her maturity and with cultural norms and not as obtaining the child's permission to proceed. SUMMARY: The concept of assent in the current guidelines is confusing. There is an urgent need for clearer guidelines that can be adapted for all types of paediatric research wherever it is to be carried out and an evidence-base concerning good assent/consent practice. This paper argues that a context specific approach should be adopted when assessing whether consent or assent should be sought from children in low-income settings. 2014-08-01T03:53:23Z 2016-11-09T14:34:17Z 2014-08-01T03:53:23Z 2016-11-09T14:34:17Z 2014 2014-07-25 2014-03-05 Article Cheah PY, Parker M. Consent and assent in paediatric research in low-income settings. BMC Med Ethics. 2014 Mar 5;15:22. 10.1186/1472-6939-15-22. 1472-6939 (electronic) https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/854 eng Mahidol University BioMed Central application/pdf
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
language English
topic Assent
Children
Consent
Low-income setting
Paediatric research
Open Access article
spellingShingle Assent
Children
Consent
Low-income setting
Paediatric research
Open Access article
Cheah, Phaik Yeong
Parker, Michael
Consent and assent in paediatric research in low-income settings.
description BACKGROUND: In order to involve children in the decision-making process about participation in medical research it is widely recommended that the child's assent be sought in addition to parental consent. However, the concept of assent is fraught with difficulties, resulting in confusion among researchers and ethics committees alike. DISCUSSION: In this paper, we outline the current international debate surrounding pediatric consent and assent, and its unique challenges arising in low-income settings. We go on to propose some key requirements for a fit-for-purpose assent model in these difficult settings. The paper recommends that children who are competent, that is, children who are judged to be able to understand and retain relevant information, weigh this information in making a mature judgment, come to a decision and communicate the decision, should be able to consent for themselves. Our proposal is that where the decision about whether to participate in a study is of comparable complexity to the decisions the child is used to making in other aspects of his or her life, it should be made by the child him or herself. The relevant level of complexity should be judged by local standards rather than standards of the developed world. In the paper we explore some of the practical challenges and counter arguments of implementing this proposal. As in high-income settings, we argue that in the case of children who are judged to lack this level of competence both parental consent and assent from the child should be sought and go on to define assent as involving the child to the extent compatible to his or her maturity and with cultural norms and not as obtaining the child's permission to proceed. SUMMARY: The concept of assent in the current guidelines is confusing. There is an urgent need for clearer guidelines that can be adapted for all types of paediatric research wherever it is to be carried out and an evidence-base concerning good assent/consent practice. This paper argues that a context specific approach should be adopted when assessing whether consent or assent should be sought from children in low-income settings.
author2 Yeong, Phaik
author_facet Yeong, Phaik
Cheah, Phaik Yeong
Parker, Michael
format Article
author Cheah, Phaik Yeong
Parker, Michael
author_sort Cheah, Phaik Yeong
title Consent and assent in paediatric research in low-income settings.
title_short Consent and assent in paediatric research in low-income settings.
title_full Consent and assent in paediatric research in low-income settings.
title_fullStr Consent and assent in paediatric research in low-income settings.
title_full_unstemmed Consent and assent in paediatric research in low-income settings.
title_sort consent and assent in paediatric research in low-income settings.
publishDate 2014
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/854
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