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Enhancing practitioners' confidence in recruitment and consent in the EcLiPSE trial: a mixed-method evaluation of site training - a Paediatric Emergency Research in the United Kingdom and Ireland (PERUKI) study.

Authors :
Woolfall, Kerry
Roper, Louise
Humphreys, Amy
Lyttle, Mark D.
Messahel, Shrouk
Lee, Elizabeth
Noblet, Joanne
Iyer, Anand
Gamble, Carrol
Hickey, Helen
Rainford, Naomi
Appleton, Richard
Source :
Trials. 3/21/2019, Vol. 20 Issue 1, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p. 1 Diagram, 7 Charts.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>EcLiPSE (Emergency treatment with Levetiracetam or Phenytoin in Status Epilepticus in children) is a randomised controlled trial (RCT) in the United Kingdom. Challenges to success include the need to immediately administer an intervention without informed consent and changes in staffing during trial conduct, mainly due to physician rotations. Using literature on parents' perspectives and research without prior consent (RWPC) guidance, we developed an interactive training package (including videos, simulation and question and answer sessions) and evaluated its dissemination and impact upon on practitioners' confidence in recruitment and consent.<bold>Methods: </bold>Questionnaires were administered before and immediately after training followed by telephone interviews (mean 11 months later), focus groups (mean 14 months later) and an online questionnaire (8 months before trial closure).<bold>Results: </bold>One hundred and twenty-five practitioners from 26/30 (87%) participating hospitals completed a questionnaire before and after training. We conducted 10 interviews and six focus groups (comprising 36 practitioners); 199 practitioners working in all recruiting hospitals completed the online questionnaire. Before training, practitioners were concerned about recruitment and consent. Confidence increased after training for explaining (all scale 0-5, 95% CIs above 0 and p values < 0.05): the study (66% improved mean score before 3.28 and after 4.52), randomisation (47% improvement, 3.86 to 4.63), RWPC (72% improvement, 2.98 to 4.39), and addressing parents' objections to randomisation (51% improvement, 3.37 to 4.25). Practitioners rated highly the content and clarity of the training, which was successfully disseminated. Some concerns about staff availability for training and consent discussions remained.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Training improved practitioners' confidence in recruitment and RWPC. Our findings highlight the value of using parents' perspectives to inform training and to engage practitioners in trials that are at high risk of being too challenging to conduct. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17456215
Volume :
20
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Trials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135468041
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-019-3273-z