Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Preferences among student counselors regarding informed consent practices within counselor education.

View through CrossRef
The purpose of this study was to investigate student preferences for content, timing, and method of informed consent within counselor education programs. Participants included 115 students enrolled in counseling internship courses at six counseling programs accredited by the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP). Participants completed the Informed Consent Preferences Questionnaire (ICPQ), an instrument designed specifically for this study through systematic instrumentation development. Descriptive statistics highlighted participants' moderate to high ratings of perceived importance for an array of suggested content pieces for student informed consent. Participants varied among themselves and between items in relation to preferred timing of informed consent, and they consistently reported a desire for student informed consent to be facilitated through a combination of both oral and written methods. Results of exploratory factor analysis revealed a simple eight-factor structure within the ICPQ and suggested strong internal reliability. Correlations for participant scale scores for the eight factors revealed a variety of small to medium correlations. Results from t-test and one-way analysis of variances (ANOVA) indicated that participant preferences did not vary according to demographic variables. Finally, participants' qualitative responses revealed high levels of support for student informed consent. Findings of this study may aid counselor educators in evaluating current program informed consent practices. As a result of evaluation, counselor educators can affirm existing, and/or design new informed consent practices that accurately reflect the needs and desires of counseling students. Future researchers may also utilize the results to guide additional studies related to the practice of student informed consent.
University of North Texas Libraries
Title: Preferences among student counselors regarding informed consent practices within counselor education.
Description:
The purpose of this study was to investigate student preferences for content, timing, and method of informed consent within counselor education programs.
Participants included 115 students enrolled in counseling internship courses at six counseling programs accredited by the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP).
Participants completed the Informed Consent Preferences Questionnaire (ICPQ), an instrument designed specifically for this study through systematic instrumentation development.
Descriptive statistics highlighted participants' moderate to high ratings of perceived importance for an array of suggested content pieces for student informed consent.
Participants varied among themselves and between items in relation to preferred timing of informed consent, and they consistently reported a desire for student informed consent to be facilitated through a combination of both oral and written methods.
Results of exploratory factor analysis revealed a simple eight-factor structure within the ICPQ and suggested strong internal reliability.
Correlations for participant scale scores for the eight factors revealed a variety of small to medium correlations.
Results from t-test and one-way analysis of variances (ANOVA) indicated that participant preferences did not vary according to demographic variables.
Finally, participants' qualitative responses revealed high levels of support for student informed consent.
Findings of this study may aid counselor educators in evaluating current program informed consent practices.
As a result of evaluation, counselor educators can affirm existing, and/or design new informed consent practices that accurately reflect the needs and desires of counseling students.
Future researchers may also utilize the results to guide additional studies related to the practice of student informed consent.

Related Results

Autonomy on Trial
Autonomy on Trial
Photo by CHUTTERSNAP on Unsplash Abstract This paper critically examines how US bioethics and health law conceptualize patient autonomy, contrasting the rights-based, individualist...
Forced Sterilization
Forced Sterilization
Photo by Renè Müller on Unsplash INTRODUCTION Forced sterilization of women around the globe is a human rights violation and bioethical concern. In the past, countries enacted laws...
EVALUASI KINERJA KONSELOR DALAM PROSES KONSELING DAN RISET KONSELING DI SEKOLAH
EVALUASI KINERJA KONSELOR DALAM PROSES KONSELING DAN RISET KONSELING DI SEKOLAH
The purpose of this study was to describe the performance of counselors in the counseling process and the research process in high school. This study is an evaluation study to coll...
PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDERS AMONG SCHOOL STUDENTS FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF THEIR STUDENT COUNSELORS: DIFFERENCES AND RELATIONSHIPS
PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDERS AMONG SCHOOL STUDENTS FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF THEIR STUDENT COUNSELORS: DIFFERENCES AND RELATIONSHIPS
Background: School students might be at risk of suffering from a range of psychological disorders. Student counselorswould help in understand the relationships and differences betw...
URGENSI KONSELING MULTIKULTURAL DI SEKOLAH
URGENSI KONSELING MULTIKULTURAL DI SEKOLAH
Every culture certainly has a different customs that will form the habit of a student in being. When the counselor and counselee met in the counseling process the counselor should ...
Requirements of informed‐consent to xenotransplantation: a qualitative interview study
Requirements of informed‐consent to xenotransplantation: a qualitative interview study
BackgroundThe aim is to establish xenotransplantation as a possible alternative to allotransplantation. The clinical application requires that patients give their informed consent ...
Counselor–Parent Communication Dynamics in Enhancing Students’ Psychological Well-Being: A Qualitative Literature Review
Counselor–Parent Communication Dynamics in Enhancing Students’ Psychological Well-Being: A Qualitative Literature Review
Effective collaboration between school counselors and parents is increasingly recognized as a vital determinant of students’ psychological well-being. While extensive research has ...
Informed consent in pediatric anesthesiology
Informed consent in pediatric anesthesiology
SummaryBackgroundInformed consent for pediatric anesthesia is unique because it is (1) obtained from surrogates (ie, parents) rather than from the patient and (2) sought after pare...

Back to Top