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A Video-Based Consent Tool: Development and Effect of Risk-Benefit Framing on Intention to Randomize

Authors :
Alex Lois
Jonathan E. Kohler
Sarah E. Monsell
Kelsey M. Pullar
Jesse Victory
Stephen R. Odom
Katherine Fischkoff
Amy H. Kaji
Heather L. Evans
Vance Sohn
Lillian S. Kao
Shah-Jahan Dodwad
Anne P. Ehlers
Hasan B. Alam
Pauline K. Park
Anusha Krishnadasan
David A. Talan
Nicole Siparsky
Thea P. Price
Patricia Ayoung-Chee
William Chiang
Matthew Salzberg
Alan Jones
Matthew E. Kutcher
Mike K. Liang
Callie M. Thompson
Wesley H. Self
Bonnie Bizzell
Bryan A. Comstock
Danielle C. Lavallee
David R. Flum
Erin Fannon
Larry G. Kessler
Patrick J. Heagerty
Sarah O. Lawrence
Tam N. Pham
Giana H. Davidson
Source :
The Journal of surgical research. 283
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Nearly 75% of clinical trials fail to enroll enough participants, and cohorts often fail to reflect the clinical and demographic diversity of at-risk populations. Effective recruitment strategies are critically important for successful clinical trials. Framing treatment risks are known to affect medical decision-making for both physicians and patients but has not been rigorously studied in surgical trials. We sought to examine the impact of a high-quality video-based consent tool and the effect of risk-benefit framing on patient willingness to participate in a surgical clinical trial.A standardized video consent was shown to all potential participants in the Comparison of Outcomes of antibiotic Drugs and Appendectomy (CODA) trial, a randomized controlled trial comparing antibiotics and surgery for acute appendicitis. We report (1) differences in recruitment between two versions of a video-based tool that differed in production quality and (2) the impact of risk-benefit framing on participant randomization rates. The reasons for declining randomization were also assessed.Of 4697 eligible patients approached to participate in the CODA trial, 1535 (33% [95% confidence interval (CI): 31%-34%]) agreed to randomization; this did not change from video version 1 to version 2. There was no difference in participation between positively framed videos (32% [95% CI: 30%-34%]) versus negatively framed videos (33.0% [95% CI: 30.8-35.2]). The most common reason for declining participation was treatment preference (72% for surgery and 18% for antibiotics).Neither the change from video 1 to video 2 nor the positive versus negative framing affected participant willingness to randomize. The stakeholder-informed video-based consenting tool used in CODA was an effective strategy for the recruitment of a heterogeneous patient population within the proposed study period.

Subjects

Subjects :
Surgery

Details

ISSN :
10958673
Volume :
283
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of surgical research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b577c747289bc15c36867719b3e16728