What proportion of patients refuse consent to data collection from their records for research purposes?
- 1 August 2000
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Vol. 50 (457) , 655-6
Abstract
In a randomised trial of the implementation of guidelines for asthma and angina, we sent questionnaires that included a request for consent to collect data from the patient's clinical records to 5069 patients in 81 general practices. Of these 3429 (67.6%) responded, of whom 335 (9.8% [95%, CI = 8.8%-10.8%]) refused consent. We conclude that consent should always be sought unless a research ethics committee has waived this requirement for pressing reasons.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Court sanctions use of anonymised patient data2000
- Informed consent in medical research: Journals should not publish research to which patients have not given fully informed consent with three exceptionsBMJ, 1997
- Development and evaluation of the Seattle Angina questionnaire: A new functional status measure for coronary artery diseaseJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1995
- Development of a symptom based outcome measure for asthmaBMJ, 1994