Emergency Research without Consent under Polish Law

Although Directive 2001/20/EC of the European Parliament and of Council of 4 April 2001 on the approximation of the laws regulations and administrative provisions of the Member States relating to the implementation of good clinical practice in the conduct of clinical trials on medicinal products for human use does not contain an exception for emergency situations, and requires the informed consent of a legal representative in all cases where research is conducted on legally competent individuals who are unable to give informed consent, in Poland, emergency research can be conducted without consent. Polish regulations on emergency research can hardly be treated as a result of intentional legislative policy. Our provisions arise from multiple and sophisticated interpretations of different regulations that govern medical experiments on human subjects and clinical trials. These interpretations can be summarized as follows: (1) There are two categories of medical experiments: therapeutic and non-therapeutic experiments. Emergency research without consent may be conducted in the category of therapeutic experiment only (therapeutic experiment consists of the introduction by the physician of new or only partially proven diagnostic, therapeutic or preventive methods in order to achieve direct benefit to the health of the patients, and it can be carried out when hitherto applied methods were ineffective or their effectiveness was insufficient). (2). Emergency research may be conducted without consent if there is a situation of great urgency in which the research subject’s life is in danger and there is no possibility of obtaining immediate consent from the research subject him or herself, or from his or her legal representative or guardianship court, and the research subject has not refused to give consent for the participation in an emergency therapeutic experiment. The legal representative or guardianship court shall be provided with all the relevant information concerning subject’s participation in an experiment as soon as possible. All projects of emergency research with intent to be done without the research subject’s consent must be approved by an independent bioethics committee. Because these five requirements seem to provide insufficient protection for a subject’s autonomy and rights it is necessary to add to them two other conditions: (1) the emergency research could not be conducted using other research participants capable of giving informed consent; and (2) informed consent for continued participation in the emergency research shall be obtained from either the participant him or herself or the legally authorized representative as soon as possible (requirement of obtaining deferred consent). A consolidated single Act that will govern all aspects of medical experiments on human subjects, including emergency research, should be prepared and enacted as soon as possible.

[1]  F. Lemaire,et al.  The European Union Directive and the protection of incapacitated subjects in research: an ethical analysis , 2004, Intensive Care Medicine.

[2]  J. Karlawish,et al.  The controversy over emergency research. A review of the issues and suggestions for a resolution. , 1996, American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

[3]  H. Ten Have,et al.  The Nuremberg Code. , 2020, Law, medicine & health care : a publication of the American Society of Law & Medicine.

[4]  A. Maas,et al.  Ethical considerations on consent procedures for emergency research in severe and moderate traumatic brain injury , 2005, Acta Neurochirurgica.

[5]  I. Roberts Research in emergency situations: with or without relatives consent , 2004, Emergency Medicine Journal.

[6]  H. White,et al.  Informed consent during the clinical emergency of acute myocardial infarction (HER0-2 consent substudy): a prospective observational study , 2003, The Lancet.

[7]  J. Gillet,et al.  Clinical trials in an emergency setting: implications from the fifth version of the Declaration of Helsinki. , 2004, The Journal of emergency medicine.

[8]  L. Richardson The ethics of research without consent in emergency situations. , 2005, The Mount Sinai journal of medicine, New York.

[9]  M. Müllner,et al.  Implications of the EU directive on clinical trials for emergency medicine , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[10]  F. Lemaire Waiving consent for emergency research , 2005, European journal of clinical investigation.

[11]  Marilyn C. Morris An ethical analysis of exception from informed consent regulations. , 2005, Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

[12]  C. Blixen,et al.  Stroke patients’ preferences and values about emergency research , 2005, Journal of Medical Ethics.

[13]  S. Lötjönen,et al.  Medical research in clinical emergency settings in Europe , 2002, Journal of medical ethics.

[14]  P. Adeleine,et al.  Ethical Issues of Informed Consent in Acute Stroke , 2005, Cerebrovascular Diseases.

[15]  P. Sandercock,et al.  Impact of Stroke Syndrome and Stroke Severity on the Process of Consent in the Third International Stroke Trial , 2006, Cerebrovascular Diseases.

[16]  B. Gandevia,et al.  DECLARATION OF HELSINKI. , 1964, The Medical journal of Australia.

[17]  Z. Bankowski,et al.  Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences , 1991 .

[18]  N. Fost Waived Consent for Emergency Research , 1998, American Journal of Law & Medicine.

[19]  C. Druml Informed consent of incapable (ICU) patients in Europe: existing laws and the EU Directive , 2004, Current opinion in critical care.

[20]  A. Algra,et al.  Informed consent in trials for neurological emergencies: the example of subarachnoid haemorrhage , 2003, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[21]  J. Bion,et al.  The European Union Directive on Clinical Research: present status of implementation in EU member states’ legislations with regard to the incompetent patient , 2005, Intensive Care Medicine.

[22]  K. Iserson The ethics of emergency medicine. , 1995, The Journal of emergency medicine.

[23]  J. Kinsella,et al.  Public perception of emergency research: a questionnaire , 2005, European journal of anaesthesiology.

[24]  J. Herlitz,et al.  Patients' experiences of intervention trials on the treatment of myocardial infarction: is it time to adjust the informed consent procedure to the patient's capacity? , 2001, Heart.

[25]  G. Clifton,et al.  Waiver of consent in studies of acute brain injury. , 2002, Journal of neurotrauma.

[26]  H. Smithline,et al.  Do patients with acute medical conditions have the capacity to give informed consent for emergency medicine research? , 1999, Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

[27]  C. Warlow,et al.  Evaluation of treatments is threatened by EC directive , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.