wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/b14746b9400e48c0f0cbc9d37b176878-cho-hae-lin-and-dan/info.yaml

138 lines
4.5 KiB
YAML

abstract: 'Background/aims Sparse literature exists on the challenges and ethical
considerations of including people with limited access to healthcare,
such as the uninsured and low-income, in clinical research in
high-income countries. However, many ethical issues should be considered
with respect to working with uninsured and low-income participants in
clinical research, including enrollment and retention, ancillary care,
and post-trial responsibilities. Attention to the uninsured and
low-income is particularly salient in the United States due to the high
rates of uninsurance and underinsurance. Thus, we conducted a scoping
review on the ethical considerations of biomedical clinical research
with uninsured and low-income participants in high-income countries in
order to describe what is known and to pinpoint areas of needed research
on this issue.
Methods MEDLINE/PubMed, Embase, and Scopus databases were searched using
terms that described main concepts of interest (e.g., uninsured,
underinsured, access to healthcare, poverty, ethics, compensation,
clinical research). Articles were included if they met four inclusion
criteria: (1) English, (2) high-income countries context, (3) about
research participants who are uninsured or low-income, which limits
their access to healthcare, and in biomedical clinical research that
either had a prospect of direct medical benefit or was offered to them
on the basis of their ill health, and (4) recognizes and/or addresses
challenges or ethical considerations of uninsured or low-income
participants in biomedical clinical research.
Results The searches generated a total of 974 results. Ultimately, 23
papers were included in the scoping review. Of 23 articles, the majority
(n = 19) discussed enrollment and retention of uninsured or low-income
participants. Several barriers to enrolling uninsured and low-income
groups were identified, including limited access to primary or
preventive care; lack of access to institutions conducting trials or
physicians with enough time or knowledge about trials; overall lack of
trust in the government, research, or medical system; and logistical
issues. Considerably fewer articles discussed treatment of these
participants during the course of research (n = 5) or post-trial
responsibilities owed to them (n = 4). Thus, we propose a research
agenda that builds upon the existing literature by addressing three
broad questions: (1) What is the current status of uninsured research
participants in biomedical clinical research in high-income countries?
(2) How should uninsured research participants be treated during and
after clinical research? (3) How, if at all, should additional
protections for uninsured research participants affect their enrollment?
Conclusions This review reveals significant gaps in both data and
thoughtful analysis on how to ethically involve uninsured research
participants. To address these gaps, we propose a research agenda to
gather needed data and theoretical analysis that addresses three broad
research questions.'
affiliation: 'Cho, HL (Corresponding Author), NIH, Dept Bioeth, Ctr Clin, 10 Ctr Dr,MSC
1156,Bldg 10,Room 1C118, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA.
Cho, Hae Lin; Danis, Marion; Grady, Christine, NIH, Dept Bioeth, Ctr Clin, 10 Ctr
Dr,MSC 1156,Bldg 10,Room 1C118, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA.'
author: Cho, Hae Lin and Danis, Marion and Grady, Christine
author-email: hae.cho@nih.gov
author_list:
- family: Cho
given: Hae Lin
- family: Danis
given: Marion
- family: Grady
given: Christine
da: '2023-09-28'
doi: 10.1177/1740774518792277
eissn: 1740-7753
files: []
issn: 1740-7745
journal: CLINICAL TRIALS
keywords: 'Ethic; clinical research; insurance; income; socioeconomic status;
enrollment; post-trial; ancillary care'
keywords-plus: 'CANCER CLINICAL-TRIALS; LOW-INCOME; MINORITY PARTICIPATION;
RACIAL/ETHNIC MINORITY; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; INFORMED-CONSENT;
AFRICAN-AMERICAN; INSURANCE STATUS; BREAST-CANCER; UNITED-STATES'
language: English
month: OCT
number: '5'
number-of-cited-references: '61'
pages: 509-521
papis_id: da8f9c534e5b7801b2e549aa03328e0a
ref: Cho2018ethicsuninsured
tags:
- review
times-cited: '17'
title: 'The ethics of uninsured participants accessing healthcare in biomedical research:
A literature review'
type: article
unique-id: WOS:000444401500009
usage-count-last-180-days: '0'
usage-count-since-2013: '14'
volume: '15'
web-of-science-categories: Medicine, Research \& Experimental
year: '2018'