On 2016 Jun 17, Timothy M Krahn commented:
It is important to emphasize that our study is about documented disclosure of information that should be provided to patients in accordance with minimum ethics standards for consent to IVF. Most of the critical points made by Hilde Bastian are openly avowed in the limitations section of the paper. We explicitly acknowledged the declining participation rate over time and the fact that fewer of the participating Canadian IVF clinics provided us with information sheets. To be clear, the documents we very specifically requested and the documents we reviewed (as stated in the article) were ‘consent documents’ comprised of both consent forms and accompanying information sheets.
As regards our content analysis, disclosure elements were deemed present if mentioned anywhere in the consent documents reviewed. Mere mention of a keyword (or keywords) for an information element was sufficient for that element to be deemed present as part of documented disclosure. We used this strategy to remove any subjectivity as regards the quality of disclosure, and to be as generous as possible (from a clinic perspective) as regards any conclusions that might be drawn. In practice, this meant that if a consent form indicated that information about a disclosure element was in an accompanying information sheet, that element would have been judged as present just on the basis of the keyword and/or a rudimentary description alone.
Thus, while Bastian is correct that information elements might have been present in the information sheets known to exist but not provided to us, reasonable efforts were made to minimize this possibility. We could do no better given that we could only work with the consent documents that the clinics provided. For the 2014 data set, all clinics were sent an initial request by email followed by a posted letter. If there was no response, those remaining were contacted at least once by telephone. In our estimation, there is nothing more we could have done to generate better and more comprehensive information without increased collaboration by Canadian IVF clinics.
We stand behind our conclusion that “the disclosure of information relevant to the interests of those undergoing IVF and those who are born as a result of IVF appears to be decreasing. Furthermore, the information that increasingly is being disclosed in consent documents appears to be directing the orientation and content of these documents away from the primary interests of the relevant women, couples, and children.” [emphasis added] This general and avowedly tentative conclusion is consistent with the limited representativeness of the data and this we openly acknowledged.
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