Clinical trials: Parents’ experiences
When the trial ends: feedback of trial results
The research team took great care to explain the results clearly and simply that made them easy...
The research team took great care to explain the results clearly and simply that made them easy...
Yes, yes, it was fine. Yes, they do a very nice newsletter, it’s a double-sided newsletter, it’s very easy to read. They’ve worked very hard at making their English very plain and very clear. You know, it is very easy to read. And then you, we got the report at two years and five years. We had that sent to us. And we had a spare copy for the school, the GP, I think. We handed it to the GP who looked slightly bemused as to why she’d been given it. But, yes, and that was very, you know, readable. Everything that they’d done there, the scores, the assessment, you know, very, very clear, very readable and a very accurate picture I would say of kind of where we were really. The communication for the growth hormone is done more when we are in a clinic. I think we have had odd bits through the post. But it has been much more when we’ve been there, “This is what we’re finding. This is what we’re looking at.” So it’s not, you know, the, I can’t remember the name of the trial, the one we did for sepsis was, you know, very nicely packaged and they’ve worked extremely well, you know, and they do a really good job, you know, at doing that and making that very accessible.
Yes, when there is no immediate benefit?
Absolutely, yes. And also the results for this we might know in two years’ time. Well, two years’ time when you’re a child is just like ages away, isn’t it, you know. So it kind of becomes a little bit meaningless. And I think that worries me a little bit. And, and that certainly would also be another factor why I wouldn’t sign up for anything else. Because I think the timescale for children is just huge. It’s, you know, very hard. And, and it’s your body, it’s, you know, which your parent is giving consent to somebody to do something to. So it is difficult, you know, and it’s very difficult. And I don’t know, you know, there must be ways of making that very appropriate because obviously, you know, trials have to go with any age.
Rachel was unable to attend the dissemination day and since then has not been able to locate the...
Rachel was unable to attend the dissemination day and since then has not been able to locate the...
The information I got afterwards, I would have preferred to have a bit more. We were invited to a dissemination day but unfortunately I couldn’t attend. But I haven’t had any feedback on the results. And I keep looking and I’m actually struggling to find it. Although I found the University website very well, it, I do remember it being quite obscure. And I’ve lost the paper and I can’t Google it. I’ve been looking for the, the trial results and I still haven’t found them. So that would be one thing that I would say. I would have preferred to have had a, actually sent a summary information about what their final conclusion was and which vaccine they’re actually using, were using. I don’t know if they still are.
Alison attended a conference providing feedback on a gene therapy trial. However, she felt her...
Alison attended a conference providing feedback on a gene therapy trial. However, she felt her...
Yes which we did have from the, they did this conference, you know, the one they did that all parents could go to and we went with some kind of inside knowledge of it and that’s where it was interesting to see “Oh yes all 24 of them were fine with no ill effects afterwards”. And you’re thinking mmmm okay my son’s experience was slightly different to that and that’s why I said afterwards, you know, are you sure it’s not connected but I didn’t feel it was appropriate to announce that to a conference hall.
The communication and feedback was brilliant, although it was a little disappointing that the...
The communication and feedback was brilliant, although it was a little disappointing that the...
And then we got the results of those all printed out and all written up and posted to us. We had copies to give to our GP. And then the trial itself, they were brilliant at communicating actually. So you get, I think kind of two, yes, probably every six months a newsletter comes out, you know, about the number of people who’ve been recruited, what’s going on, what they thinks’ happening. They even send us Christmas cards I do believe. I think they might have stopped that now. But it, it was, the communication, you know, was really very good. And actually what they found with the antibiotics is that it doesn’t make any difference whatsoever. So that antibiotic is not going to be used in neonatal medicine. So that was quite surprising actually, because that wasn’t what we’d been led to believe. So that’s quite an interesting turn on, you know, why you need clinical trials actually to, even though everyone had a good feeling and it had been very successful in paediatric medicine, for, for neonates that wasn’t applicable. So that was quite interesting. So we had the antibiotics for nothing. But never mind. I’ll put that down to, that’s just the way it goes. That was the purpose of it.
Being in the control group, Catherine didn't feel strongly about being given the trial results....
Being in the control group, Catherine didn't feel strongly about being given the trial results....
No, I don’t know if it had finished, I don’t know how long they were doing it for, and I suppose if it had been something different I might [noise] have been more interested in the results but at that point you know there was so much else going on for us and it wasn’t directly affecting him so I didn’t I didn’t ask to see the results.
Vicky will ask about the results of the trial at her next appointment.
Vicky will ask about the results of the trial at her next appointment.
Well, I guess the only thing would be maybe to explain a bit more how the questionnaires related to what they were trying to get out of the trial really. Because as I said earlier, it, sometimes I thought, “Well, I really don’t know why they’re asking this” related to the topic of the, the trial. But, so I think that would have been perhaps useful. And also the follow-up. So, you know, informing us of the outcome. Obviously we’ve only just finished, so there’s time for that to happen. But there was no mention that that would happen in the near future. And I should have asked. But, but I think that would certainly be useful for any trial.
It would be nice to know the outcome of all the information collated by the researchers. Gary...
It would be nice to know the outcome of all the information collated by the researchers. Gary...
And have they said anything about results at all?
Laura will ask the researchers if the results will be posted on a website. She would also like to...
Laura will ask the researchers if the results will be posted on a website. She would also like to...
I don’t think so. But I, obviously being a new mum and not getting a lot of sleep, there might be some things I’ve forgotten. But I don’t think, I don’t think, because they, it takes a little while, doesn’t it? To collate that sort of information. And of course other people won’t be, there will have been babies starting after Beth. So I suspect it’ll take quite a few months to, to get that information in.
Last reviewed September 2018
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