Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
This study aims to gather insights into the perceptions of legal representatives regarding the recruitment process for clinical trials in the intensive care setting when the patients cannot decide for themselves. With this information, effective strategies will be developed to increase involvement and the feeling of ownership of LARs of (potential) participants in clinical trials and thus enhance and facilitate patient recruitment for clinical trials. The single-arm study design does not include a choice of comparator, as the focus of this trial is to explore the perceptions of the participants at first hand without comparing different cohorts or strategies.
Full description
The evidence for specific therapies and treatment strategies, particularly for critically ill patients, remains limited. A significant difficulty for the planning, initiation and implementation of clinical trials in these patients is the urgency of the necessary medical measures, which leaves patients and their relatives, as well as the treating clinicians, little time and opportunities to present necessary studies and to inform the patients or their legal guardians about them. Critically ill patients are a particularly vulnerable group of patients. The measures required as part of a study can mean additional efforts for these patients over and above the burden of the disease and the necessary diagnostic and therapeutic measures, which are only justified if special duties of care are observed. In addition to an ethical assessment of the study, this also includes providing comprehensive information to patients or their legal representatives.
In this study, the process of informing and educating patients or their legal representatives will be examined in more detail. The aim of the study is to gain a better understanding of this process, in particular the perceptions and views of the persons to be informed, and specifically to investigate which aspects are particularly important to patients and their legal representatives in an information and education discussion and what information they need in order to be able to consider participating in a study or what reasons exist that would prevent them from giving their consent. The overall aim of this study is to improve the information and education process.
For some years now, the involvement of patients and relatives in individual aspects of the planning and conduct of clinical trials has been increasingly demanded and promoted. For example, large public funders often require the involvement of patient and/or family representatives at an early stage in the planning of trials. The objectives of this study are based on these expectations.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Alexander Supady, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal