Rosalynn C Austin, Anne Marie Lunde Husebø, Hege Wathne, Marianne Storm, Kristin H Urstad, Ingvild Morken, Bjørg Karlsen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Chronic illness research has many challenges making research recruitment difficult. Despite reports of facilitators and barriers to research recruitment challenges remain. The reporting of research strategies and their impact on recruitment and subsequent randomised control trials is not sufficient. A newly developed chronic illness research recruitment taxonomy (CIRRT) details factors and elements observed to impact recruitment around the components of Project, People, and Place. This paper aims to use the chronic illness research recruitment taxonomy to report and evaluate the recruitment strategies, impact they had on recruitment, and alterations to an eHealth feasibility study.
Methods: Retrospective mixed method approach was used to inductively code the research team meeting minutes during the recruitment period. The coding was then abductively matched to the chronic illness research recruitment taxonomy and gaps in the CIRRT noted. Dated coding data were integrated with recruitment progress to explore the impact of research recruitment strategies.
Results: Meeting minutes (n = 66) were analysed, recruitment strategies identified and matched to CIRRT. The reporting and identification of the recruitment strategies was aided by CIRRT use. By integrating the codes that aligned with CIRRT with recruitment progress was observed to be impacted by staffing and researcher visits.
Conclusions: CIRRT may be a useful tool in the evaluation and reporting of research recruitment strategies. Altering the roles of nurses involved and researcher visits to recruiting sites may positively impact on chronic illness research recruitment.
期刊介绍:
Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications is an international peer reviewed open access journal that publishes articles pertaining to all aspects of clinical trials, including, but not limited to, design, conduct, analysis, regulation and ethics. Manuscripts submitted should appeal to a readership drawn from a wide range of disciplines including medicine, life science, pharmaceutical science, biostatistics, epidemiology, computer science, management science, behavioral science, and bioethics. Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications is unique in that it is outside the confines of disease specifications, and it strives to increase the transparency of medical research and reduce publication bias by publishing scientifically valid original research findings irrespective of their perceived importance, significance or impact. Both randomized and non-randomized trials are within the scope of the Journal. Some common topics include trial design rationale and methods, operational methodologies and challenges, and positive and negative trial results. In addition to original research, the Journal also welcomes other types of communications including, but are not limited to, methodology reviews, perspectives and discussions. Through timely dissemination of advances in clinical trials, the goal of Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications is to serve as a platform to enhance the communication and collaboration within the global clinical trials community that ultimately advances this field of research for the benefit of patients.