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. 2019 Jul;41(4):23-30.
doi: 10.1002/eahr.500024.

How Do We Really Communicate? Challenging the Assumptions behind Informed Consent Interventions

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How Do We Really Communicate? Challenging the Assumptions behind Informed Consent Interventions

Stephanie Solomon Cargill. Ethics Hum Res. 2019 Jul.

Abstract

It is generally accepted that ethical research requires valid informed consent and that current informed consent practice frequently fails to attain it. Interventions concerning the content and methods of communication in informed consent have met with limited success. One explanation is that they reflect an outdated and limited model of how communication functions, the transmission model of communication. This model assumes that communication is linear, is limited in time, and succeeds when the content of a message is passed from one person to another without distortion. Later communication models have challenged the limitations and inaccuracies of this model, emphasizing the continuous, contextual, and relational nature of communication. Looking beyond these assumptions behind current interventions can open multiple paths of research and intervention that have the potential to affect and improve the informed consent process in much greater ways than have been achieved previously.

Keywords: human subjects research; informed consent; informed consent information; transmission model of communication.

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