TY - JOUR
T1 - Guidelines for the creation of accessible consent materials and procedures: lessons from research with autistic people and people with intellectual disability
AU - Beck, Kelly B.
AU - MacKenziem, Kristen T.
AU - Kirby, Anne V.
AU - McDonald, Katherine
AU - Moura, Ian
AU - Breitenfeldt, Kaitlyn
AU - Rutenberg, Elizabeth
AU - Kumar, Tanvi
AU - Mancino, Juliet
AU - Sabatello, Maya
AU - Roth, Shannon
AU - Nicolaidis, Christina
AU - Working to Increase Inclusivity in Research Ethics (WIRE) Consortium
AU - Kapp, Steven Kenneth
PY - 2025/2/19
Y1 - 2025/2/19
N2 - Informed, voluntary, ongoing consent is a central tenet of ethical research. However, consent processes are prone to exclusionary practices and inaccessibility. Consent materials are often too long and complex to foster understanding and ensure that people make truly informed decisions to participate in research. While this complexity is problematic for all people, these challenges are compounded for autistic people and people with intellectual disability. Consent materials and procedures rarely incorporate accommodations for processing and communication differences common in autism and intellectual disability. Failure to provide such accommodations ultimately threatens the conduct of ethical research. We describe lessons learned across multiple major U.S. research institutions that improved informed consent materials and procedures, with the goal of fostering responsible inclusion in research for autistic people and people with intellectual disability. We used these alternative materials and procedures in multiple research projects with samples of autistic people and people with intellectual disability. Each contributing team partnered with university human research participant protections personnel, accessibility experts, community members, and researchers to develop rigorous procedures for improving the readability and accessibility of informed consent materials. We present guidelines for designing consent materials and procedures and assert that participatory methods are vital to the success of ongoing accessibility initiatives. Adoption of understandable consent materials and accessible consent procedures can cultivate more equitable, respectful, and inclusive human research practices. Future work should expand on this work to design inclusive practices for populations with additional considerations.
AB - Informed, voluntary, ongoing consent is a central tenet of ethical research. However, consent processes are prone to exclusionary practices and inaccessibility. Consent materials are often too long and complex to foster understanding and ensure that people make truly informed decisions to participate in research. While this complexity is problematic for all people, these challenges are compounded for autistic people and people with intellectual disability. Consent materials and procedures rarely incorporate accommodations for processing and communication differences common in autism and intellectual disability. Failure to provide such accommodations ultimately threatens the conduct of ethical research. We describe lessons learned across multiple major U.S. research institutions that improved informed consent materials and procedures, with the goal of fostering responsible inclusion in research for autistic people and people with intellectual disability. We used these alternative materials and procedures in multiple research projects with samples of autistic people and people with intellectual disability. Each contributing team partnered with university human research participant protections personnel, accessibility experts, community members, and researchers to develop rigorous procedures for improving the readability and accessibility of informed consent materials. We present guidelines for designing consent materials and procedures and assert that participatory methods are vital to the success of ongoing accessibility initiatives. Adoption of understandable consent materials and accessible consent procedures can cultivate more equitable, respectful, and inclusive human research practices. Future work should expand on this work to design inclusive practices for populations with additional considerations.
KW - Autism
KW - intellectual disability
KW - informed consent
KW - research ethics
KW - human research participant protections
KW - participatory research
U2 - 10.1089/aut.2024.0263
DO - 10.1089/aut.2024.0263
M3 - Article
SN - 2573-9581
JO - Autism in Adulthood
JF - Autism in Adulthood
ER -