Individual consent in cluster randomised trials for non-pharmaceutical interventions: going beyond the Ottawa statement
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3131916Utgivelsesdato
2024Metadata
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Sammendrag
This paper discusses the issue of overriding the right of individual consent
to participation in cluster randomised trials (CRTs). We focus on CRTs
testing the efficacy of non-pharmaceutical interventions. As an example,
we consider school closures during the COVID-19 pandemic. In Norway,
a CRT was promoted as necessary for providing the best evidence to
inform pandemic management policy. However, the proposal was
rejected by the Norwegian Research Ethics Committee since it would
violate the requirement for individual informed consent. This sparked
debate about whether ethics stand in the way of evidence-based health
policy, since the Norwegian Research Ethics law’s strict requirements for
individual consent make it practically impossible to carry out CRTs of
public health interventions. We argue that, in the case of the school
closure trial, the suggested CRT would not have eliminated an epistemic
gap and thus would not have justified the violation of consent rights. First,
we focus on the methodological challenges to estimating quantifiable
effects of school closures in the specific case of an airborne infectious
disease. Second, in line with Evidential Pluralism, we highlight the value of
alternative lines of evidence for informing school closure policy in
a pandemic. In general, we propose that a trial requiring the waiver of
participants’ consent rights must be highly likely to eliminate an epistemic
gap. We elaborate on the practical aspects of this criterion and discuss the
potential advantages of adding it to the Ottawa Statement on the Ethical
Design and Conduct of Cluster Randomized Trials.