Dt. Kim et Wh. Spivey, A RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS OF INSTITUTIONAL REVIEW BOARD AND INFORMED CONSENT PRACTICES IN EMS RESEARCH, Annals of emergency medicine, 23(1), 1994, pp. 70-74
Study objective: To assess the frequency of institutional review board
(IRB) review and informed consent in emergency medical services (EMS)
research. Design: Two-year, retrospective review of published EMS res
earch. Measurements and main results: One hundred two studies were ana
lyzed. Seventy-one (70%) were exempt from IRB review; 31 (30%) were no
t exempt. Seventeen nonexempt studies (55%) did not obtain IRB review.
Eight of these did not specify a consent method; one used implied con
sent and eight used volunteers. Volunteers gave informed consent in on
e study. Of the 14 nonexempt studies with IRB approval, seven did not
specify a consent method. Two used informed consent, one received an i
nformed consent waiver, one used verbal consent, and three involved vo
lunteers. Written parent permission was used once when volunteers were
minors. Conclusion: IRB review is often omitted by EMS investigators.
This raises ethical concerns about EMS research. Investigators should
document their consent method or approval to use an informed consent
waiver in their manuscripts. A consent method should be specified for
volunteers.