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Patient recruitment for clinical trials on traditional Chinese medicine: Challenges, barriers, and strategies

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Failure to recruit sufficient numbers of participants is a major barrier to the completion of randomized controlled trials in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) clinical trials. The purpose of this paper is to analyze the commonly used strategies for the recruitment of pati...

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Autores principales: King-Fai, Cheng, Ping-Chung, Leung, Lai-Yi, Wong, Yuet-Shim, Fong
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2770389/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19920965
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author King-Fai, Cheng
Ping-Chung, Leung
Lai-Yi, Wong
Yuet-Shim, Fong
author_facet King-Fai, Cheng
Ping-Chung, Leung
Lai-Yi, Wong
Yuet-Shim, Fong
author_sort King-Fai, Cheng
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Failure to recruit sufficient numbers of participants is a major barrier to the completion of randomized controlled trials in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) clinical trials. The purpose of this paper is to analyze the commonly used strategies for the recruitment of patients in TCM clinical trials, to identify the most common reasons for attrition and refusal, and to identify barriers and potential solutions to the difficulties. METHODS AND RESULTS: There are four stages in the actual recruitment process, which included introducing the project to the potential patients, explaining how to implement the project, assessing and intensifying the understanding and facilitating patient decision-making. When insufficient recruitment occurred, the following steps should be considered: reevaluating the required sample size; adding new sites to the trial; eliminating hospitals that had poor recruiting records; extending the patient recruitment period, modifying the patient inclusion/exclusion criteria; and shifting placebo-controlled to active-controlled arrangements. Success in reaching target recruitment depended largely on being able to directly contact patients through posters, newspaper advertisements, television interviews, patient support groups, and physician referrals in hospitals. CONCLUSIONS: Suspicions against the placebo and unwillingness to stop taking other herbal supplements made recruitment more difficult, time-consuming, and costly. In a Chinese community, open advertising in the local newspaper may be particularly attractive.
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spelling pubmed-27703892009-11-17 Patient recruitment for clinical trials on traditional Chinese medicine: Challenges, barriers, and strategies King-Fai, Cheng Ping-Chung, Leung Lai-Yi, Wong Yuet-Shim, Fong Patient Prefer Adherence Original Research BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Failure to recruit sufficient numbers of participants is a major barrier to the completion of randomized controlled trials in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) clinical trials. The purpose of this paper is to analyze the commonly used strategies for the recruitment of patients in TCM clinical trials, to identify the most common reasons for attrition and refusal, and to identify barriers and potential solutions to the difficulties. METHODS AND RESULTS: There are four stages in the actual recruitment process, which included introducing the project to the potential patients, explaining how to implement the project, assessing and intensifying the understanding and facilitating patient decision-making. When insufficient recruitment occurred, the following steps should be considered: reevaluating the required sample size; adding new sites to the trial; eliminating hospitals that had poor recruiting records; extending the patient recruitment period, modifying the patient inclusion/exclusion criteria; and shifting placebo-controlled to active-controlled arrangements. Success in reaching target recruitment depended largely on being able to directly contact patients through posters, newspaper advertisements, television interviews, patient support groups, and physician referrals in hospitals. CONCLUSIONS: Suspicions against the placebo and unwillingness to stop taking other herbal supplements made recruitment more difficult, time-consuming, and costly. In a Chinese community, open advertising in the local newspaper may be particularly attractive. Dove Medical Press 2008-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2770389/ /pubmed/19920965 Text en © 2008 King-Fai et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd. This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
King-Fai, Cheng
Ping-Chung, Leung
Lai-Yi, Wong
Yuet-Shim, Fong
Patient recruitment for clinical trials on traditional Chinese medicine: Challenges, barriers, and strategies
title Patient recruitment for clinical trials on traditional Chinese medicine: Challenges, barriers, and strategies
title_full Patient recruitment for clinical trials on traditional Chinese medicine: Challenges, barriers, and strategies
title_fullStr Patient recruitment for clinical trials on traditional Chinese medicine: Challenges, barriers, and strategies
title_full_unstemmed Patient recruitment for clinical trials on traditional Chinese medicine: Challenges, barriers, and strategies
title_short Patient recruitment for clinical trials on traditional Chinese medicine: Challenges, barriers, and strategies
title_sort patient recruitment for clinical trials on traditional chinese medicine: challenges, barriers, and strategies
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2770389/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19920965
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