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Citation

Corneli, Amy L.; Sorenson, James R.; Bentley, Margaret E.; Henderson, Gail E.; Bowling, J. Michael; Nkhoma, Jacqueline R.; Moses, Agnes; Zulu, Cynthia; Chilima, James; & Ahmed, Yusuf, et al. (2012). Improving Participant Understanding of Informed Consent in an HIV-Prevention Clinical Trial: A Comparison of Methods. AIDS and Behavior, 16(2), 412-421. PMCID: PMC3923514

Abstract

Empirical research on informed consent has shown that study participants often do not fully understand consent information. This study assessed participant understanding of three mock consent approaches describing an HIV-prevention clinical trial in Lilongwe, Malawi prior to trial implementation. Pregnant women (n = 297) were systematically selected from antenatal-care waiting lines and sequentially allocated to receive an enhanced standard consent form (group 1), a context-specific consent form (group 2), or context-specific counseling cards (group 3). Understanding of research concepts and study procedures was assessed immediately postintervention and at 1-week follow-up. At postintervention, participants in groups 2 and 3 understood more about research concepts and study procedures compared with group 1. Group 3 participants also understood more about study procedures compared with group 2. At follow-up, participants in groups 2 and 3 continued to understand more about research concepts and study procedures. Context-specific approaches improved understanding of consent information in this study.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10461-011-9977-z

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2012

Journal Title

AIDS and Behavior

Author(s)

Corneli, Amy L.
Sorenson, James R.
Bentley, Margaret E.
Henderson, Gail E.
Bowling, J. Michael
Nkhoma, Jacqueline R.
Moses, Agnes
Zulu, Cynthia
Chilima, James
Ahmed, Yusuf
Heilig, Charles M.
Jamieson, Denise J.
van der Horst, Charles M.
Breastfeeding, Antiretroviral, and Nutrition Informed Consent Study Group,

PMCID

PMC3923514

ORCiD

Bentley - 0000-0002-1220-0208