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Abstract
Med Ethics
Emergency departments are
challenging research settings, where truly informed consent can be
difficult to obtain. A deeper
understanding of emergency medical
patients’ opinions about research is needed. We conducted a systematic
review and meta-summary
of quantitative and qualitative studies
on which values, attitudes, or beliefs of emergent medical research
participants influence
research participation. We included
studies of adults that investigated opinions toward emergency medicine
research participation.
We excluded studies focused on the
association between demographics or consent document features and
participation and those
focused on non-emergency research............... We report themes associated
with participation or refusal. Our initial search produced over 1800
articles. A total
of 44 articles were extracted for
full-manuscript analysis, and 14 were retained based on our eligibility
criteria. Among
factors favouring participation,
altruism and personal health benefit had the highest frequency. Mistrust
of researchers,
feeling like a ‘guinea pig’ and risk
were leading factors favouring refusal. Many studies noted limitations
of informed consent
processes in emergent conditions. We
conclude that highlighting the benefits to the participant and society,
mitigating risk
and increasing public trust may
increase research participation in emergency medical research. New
methods for conducting
informed consent in such studies are
needed
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