Monetary Incentives Improve Recall of Research Consent Information: It Pays to Remember

David Festinger, D. Marlowe, J. Croft, K. Dugosh, P. Arabia, K. Benasutti

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Research participants often fail to recall substantial amounts of informed consent information after delays of only a few days. Numerous interventions have proven effective at improving consent recall; however, virtually all have focused on compensating for potential cognitive deficits and have ignored motivational factors. In this pilot study, the authors randomly assigned 31 drug court clients participating in a clinical research trial to a control group that received a standard informed consent procedure or to a group that received the same procedure plus incentives for correctly recalling consent information. The incentive group was told they would receive $5 for each of the 15 consent items they could answer correctly 1 week later. At the follow-up, the incentive group recalled a significantly greater percentage of consent information overall than the control group (65% vs. 42%, p < .01). Findings from this study have important implications for the ethical conduct of human subject research. The incentivized consent procedure may be a useful for improving consent recall in research studies, particularly those involving potentially serious side effects. The results also provide an important "proof of concept" regarding the utility of motivational procedures for improving recall of consent information. © 2009 American Psychological Association.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalExperimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology
Volume17
StatePublished - Jan 1 2009

Keywords

  • adult
  • article
  • clinical article
  • clinical trial
  • controlled clinical trial
  • controlled study
  • female
  • human
  • informed consent
  • male
  • medical research
  • money
  • motivation
  • pilot study
  • randomized controlled trial
  • recall
  • research subject
  • reward

Disciplines

  • Substance Abuse and Addiction

Cite this