# Parent and practitioner experiences of opt-out consent in neonatal intensive care: a mixed methods study within a trial

**Authors:** Tracy Mitchell, Izabela Andrzejewska, Cheryl Battersby, Christina Cole, Zoe Daskalopoulou, Jon Dorling, Chris Gale, Michaela Graham, Marie Hubbard, Pollyanna Hardy, Madeleine Hurd, Andrew Robert King, Brett James Manley, David Murray, Elizabeth Nuthall, Heather O’Connor, Shalini Ojha, Calum T Roberts, Amy Rodriquez, Charles Christoph Roehr, Kayleigh Stanbury, Lyvonne Tume, Lauren Young, Kerry Woolfall

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/archdischild-2025-328693 · 2025-08-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how a verbal opt-out consent process is used and accepted in a neonatal trial involving parents and healthcare staff.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the practical implementation and acceptability of opt-out consent in neonatal clinical trials.

## Key findings

- Parents and staff found opt-out consent acceptable for low-risk neonatal trials.
- Only 21% of parents noticed study information posters, indicating limited awareness through passive methods.
- Some staff used a modified opt-in approach, showing variability in how opt-out consent was applied.

## Abstract

In neonatal trials, verbal opt-out consent has been used to reduce burden on families and make recruitment more efficient and representative. It involves information provision through posters and leaflets before randomisation, and parents can verbally ‘opt out’ of their baby being randomised to the trial. There is limited understanding of how opt-out consent is operationalised in a multicentre neonatal trial, and its acceptability to staff and parents.

To explore views and experiences of verbal opt-out consent in neoGASTRIC, a neonatal randomised trial comparing routine and no routine measurements of gastric contents in preterm babies.

A mixed methods (questionnaires, interviews and focus groups) process evaluation within a trial.

Four UK neonatal units.

253 participants: 167 staff (149 questionnaires; 18 across two focus groups), 86 parents (85 questionnaires; 15 interviews; 14 took part in both).

Parents and staff supported opt-out consent in neoGASTRIC as interventions were viewed as low risk and non-invasive. Parents appreciated an appropriately timed research conversation; only 21% noticed study information banners/posters. Operationalisation of opt-out consent varied in terms of when information was provided and randomisation timing. Women approached during labour or within hours of birth reported feeling overwhelmed and lacking capacity to consider research. Some staff operationalised a modified opt-in approach.

An appropriately timed verbal opt-out approach to consent was seen acceptable as proportionate in the neonatal context in a low-risk trial comparing different accepted clinical, non-pharmaceutical, practices. Findings informed neoGASTRIC and will guide approaches to consent in this setting.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13018813/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13018813