Brian – Cohort studies
Brian is participating in a birth cohort study and a biobanking study. He has received regular feedback from the birth cohort study over the years and recently he has been consulted on the next stage of the research which is focusing on ageing.
Brian is participating in a birth cohort study and a biobanking study and both have been positive experiences. He has taken part in the birth cohort study for over 70 years. At primary school, Brian remembers occasionally being taken out of class to have medicals and IQ tests. He didn’t mind doing these tests at the time; it was just part of his life, and he felt special and proud to be part of the research. Brian would have liked to have known how well he did in the tests, but he did not receive individual feedback. He is unsure if he could still have access to these results now.
Over the years, Brian has filled in questionnaires and he thinks there may have been other tests, but he cannot remember. More recently the focus of the research has been on ageing and members of the research team have visited him at home to conduct various tests, such as, memory and physical ability. He did not find these tests difficult, nor did it take up too much time.
His most recent involvement has been spending a day with the research team where together with several other research participants he was consulted on his views of the next stage of the research which may involve blood tests and MRI scans. Brian thought it was good to be involved in the planning stages because it helped to identify any potential problems that might occur before the next stage of the research started.
Brian assumes consent for the study was originally given by his parents and he thinks he may have filled in more consent forms as the years went by, but he has never considered leaving the study. He trusts the organisations running the research and so he feels his information is secure. The reputation of the organisation running the research is very important in Brian’s decision to take part in any medical research. He would not be concerned about taking part in research run by “a bona fide, genuine, probably a public authority, who you can trust and to do the right thing”. Brian felt he could contact the research team easily if he needed to.
For many years, Brian has received a birthday card from the research team which included a brief update of what has taken place that year which he felt was sufficient feedback. More recently, Brian attended a 65th and a 70th birthday celebration for all the research participants where he was able to meet the researchers and hear about the results of the research. He understands that there are costs of feeding back information and feels that the research team for the birth cohort study got the level of feedback just right.
Brian is also part of a biobanking study. To join the study, he initially attended a day event in a city near his home where he had tests and health information questions to answer. Since then he fills in questionnaire surveys online.
Brian says the reason he has taken part in both cohort studies is to benefit the next generation. He sees no benefits to himself but after seeing the positive outputs from the birth cohort study he was motivated to take part in other cohort studies because he believed it would also produce something worthwhile.
Interview conducted in 2019.