Golfo Tzilos Wernette, Kristina Countryman, Dongru Chen, Okeoma Mmeje, Ananda Sen, Quyen M Ngo, Caron Zlotnick
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on recruitment has been significant, including the recruitment of pregnant individuals with behavioral health risk factors. The objective of this manuscript is to highlight our response to the methodological challenges created by the pandemic and how we leveraged technology to adapt and expand our recruitment procedures for the Health Check-up for Expectant Moms, a technology-delivered behavioral skills intervention aimed at empowering and motivating pregnant women engaging in substance use and sexual health risks (e.g., condomless sex, multiple partners) to reduce their likelihood of STIs and substance use during pregnancy. After the onset of the pandemic, we transitioned from in-person recruitment to remote clinic recruitment (e.g., by phone, text messaging, and e-mail) as well as social media campaigns via Facebook® and Instagram® with a confidential web-based screening questionnaire for our study targeting pregnant women in 27 counties of Michigan. For remote recruitment, we contacted 6238 women; 1360 completed the study screening questionnaire (mean age = 31.5; SD = 4.6), 90 were eligible, and 73 were enrolled (6% eligibility). For social media recruitment, we had 2512 completing the pre-screening questionnaire. Of these, 501 (mean age = 31.9; SD = 4.6) went on to complete the full study screening questionnaire, 25 women were eligible, and 20 were enrolled (5%). Our 5% eligibility rate from our social media campaign is on par with our remote and in-clinic recruitment methods yet took far less time (15 weeks vs. 150 weeks vs. 48 weeks, respectively). Despite study recruitment challenges related to the pandemic, remote recruitment-particularly social media-was found to be a successful approach, may have a broader reach, and a cost-effective alternative to active recruitment.
期刊介绍:
Prevention Science is the official publication of the Society for Prevention Research. The Journal serves as an interdisciplinary forum designed to disseminate new developments in the theory, research and practice of prevention. Prevention sciences encompassing etiology, epidemiology and intervention are represented through peer-reviewed original research articles on a variety of health and social problems, including but not limited to substance abuse, mental health, HIV/AIDS, violence, accidents, teenage pregnancy, suicide, delinquency, STD''s, obesity, diet/nutrition, exercise, and chronic illness. The journal also publishes literature reviews, theoretical articles, meta-analyses, systematic reviews, brief reports, replication studies, and papers concerning new developments in methodology.