肿瘤学研究中的知情同意书:语言工具识别反复出现的陷阱

N. Ilic, A. Auchlin, A. Hadengue, A. Wenger, S. Hurst
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引用次数: 7

摘要

背景:对临床研究知情同意表(ICFs)的理解仍然不足,尽管试图简化它们。通过语言话语分析,我们试图找出icf文本中可能阻碍读者理解参与研究的陷阱。方法:我们对经研究伦理委员会(rec)批准用于肿瘤学方案的19份icf的定性样本进行了语言话语分析,并探讨我们的发现是否也适用于在线可获得的标准美国文件。结果:我们确定了在确保知情同意方面存在问题的五大类语言模式。我们将它们分类如下:“绕过同意”、“寻求者-供应者倒置”、“连锁俄罗斯娃娃”、“消失的作者”和“一刀切”。在所有分析的表格(每个ICF中位数为10,范围为1-18)以及国家模板和美国文件中至少存在一个这些发现的实例。结论:语言话语分析确定了rec批准的icf和模板语言中反复出现的陷阱。这种方法可能为改善ICFs提供新的工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Informed Consent Forms in Oncology Research: Linguistic Tools Identify Recurrent Pitfalls
Background: Understanding of informed consent forms (ICFs) for clinical research remains insufficient despite attempts to simplify them. Through linguistic discourse analysis, we sought to identify pitfalls within the text of ICFs that could hinder readers’ understanding of participation in research. Methods: We conducted a linguistic discourse analysis on a qualitative sample of 19 ICFs approved by research ethics committees (RECs) for oncology protocols and explored whether our findings also applied to standard U.S. documents available online. Results: We identified five major categories of language patterns that were problematic with respect to ensuring informed consent. We categorized them as follows: “bypassing consent,” “seeker–supplier inversion,” “interlocking Russian dolls,” “vanishing author,” and “one size fits all.” At least one instance of these findings existed in all analyzed forms (median 10 per ICF, range 1–18) and in national templates and U.S. documents. Conclusions: Linguistic discourse analysis identified recurrent pitfalls in the language of REC-approved ICFs and templates. This approach may provide new tools to improve ICFs.
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