Meehan A, Bundorf MK, Klimke R, Stults CD, Chan AS, Pun T, Tai-Seale M., J Patient Exp. 7(1):12-15. doi: 10.1177/2374373519827029. Epub 2019 Nov 26., 2020 Feb 01
Investigators
Albert Chan, M.D., M.S., FAAFP, Cheryl Stults, Ph.D., Assistant Scientist
Abstract
Online consenting allows potential participants of research projects to deliberate their participation at their own pace and may be more cost-effective than conventional approaches.
Yet, online consenting is not widespread in health services research due partly to concerns about security, confidentiality, and lack of established processes.
We report Online consenting allows potential participants of research projects to deliberate their participation at their own pace and may be more cost-effective than conventional approaches. Yet, online consenting is not widespread in health services research due partly to concerns about security, confidentiality, and lack of established processes. We report our use of online consenting to successfully enroll over 1185 Medicare beneficiaries in a short 9-week time frame for a research study.