Community Perspectives on Research Consent Involving Vulnerable Children in Western Kenya

Country
Kenya
Region
Africa
Language
English
Year Published
2012
Author
R Vreeman, E Kamaara, A Kamanda, D Ayuku, M Scanlon
Organisation
No data
Topics
Health Research, data collection and evidence Social connections / Family
Summary

This article is published in the Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics. The authors have made a version available to read online.

Involving vulnerable pediatric populations in international research requires culturally appropriate ethical protections. We sought to use mabaraza, traditional East African community assemblies, to understand how a community in western Kenya viewed participation of children in health research and informed consent and assent processes. Results from 108 participants revealed generally positive attitudes towards involving vulnerable children in research, largely because they assumed children would directly benefit. Consent from parents or guardians was understood as necessary for participation while gaining child assent was not. They felt other caregivers, community leaders, and even community assemblies could participate in the consent process. Community members believed research involving orphans and street children could benefit these vulnerable populations, but would require special processes for consent.

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