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Friday, 15 December, 2000, 02:33 GMT
Parents
'in dark' over baby research

Consent form: parents do not know all the facts
Most
parents are confused by requests to allow their babies to be used in medical
projects, according to research.
And some parents are being unduly
pressurised to give their consent, it is claimed.
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I think strongly that even if they are told about the risks,
they are not absorbing it.

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Suzette Woodward, Great Ormond Street Hospital
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Doctors must get parental consent for all
medical procedures on children - and that consent is not fully valid unless
the adult has a proper understanding of the nature and risks.
But research in The Lancet medical journal
found that a slim majority of parents in nine European countries, including
the UK, had not fully given their consent.
The researchers discovered that 42 parents
out of a sample of 200 did not fully understand the procedure or treatment
and 43 had simply not been given enough information.
In a further 21 cases, there was a question
mark over whether parents had been pressured into signing the consent form.
The study is released just a day after the
publication of a British Medical Association book giving guidance to doctors
on the dos and don'ts of obtaining consent from patients.
It says young children should be helped to
express their views about medical treatment as soon as they can talk, and
that parents who insist on hiding medical details from their children should
be discouraged from lying.
The BMA guidance also advises doctors how
to decide whether patients are mentally competent to give consent, and on the
impact of the recently-introduced Human Rights Act.
Beefed up process
Only 5% of doctors questioned had been
given some form of training about the right way of seeking consent.
The investigators suggest that the
consenting process could be beefed up by making sure all staff, including
researchers, receive guidance on how to do it.
In addition, parents should be given
written material about operations or treatments.
Ms Suzette Woodward, assistant director of
clinical governance at Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital in London, has
carried out her own investigation into the quality of consenting.
She found that the majority of parents were
satisfied with what they were told, but thought this might be the result of a
good result in the subsequent operation.
Closer analysis found that a third of
parents wanted more information about the potential risks or complications.
She told BBC News Online: "I think
strongly that even if they are told about the risks, they are not absorbing
it.
"It needs to be explained in a way
that they can remember it.
"I think doctors and nurses need to be
trained at a very junior level. At the moment they learn from osmosis which
is a shame."
The issue of consent figures strongly in
the inquiry into the retention of organs from children who died at Alder Hey
Hospital in Liverpool.
Parents claimed they had not been properly
informed that organs could be kept for research.
A report into the affair is expected early
in the New Year.
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