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Recruiting under-represented populations into psychiatric research: Results from the help for hoarding study

This study compares the effectiveness of approaches used to recruit a diverse sample for a randomized clinical trial for Hoarding Disorder (HD) in the San Francisco Bay Area. Of the 632 individuals who inquired about the study, 313 were randomized and 231 completed treatment. Most participants heard...

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Autores principales: Martin, Anna M., Zakrzewski, Jessica J., Chou, Chia-Ying, Uhm, Soo Y., Gause, R. Michael, Chan, Joanne, Eckfield, Monika, Salazar, Mark, Vigil, Ofilio, Bain, David, Stark, Sandra J., Mackin, R. Scott, Vega, Eduardo, Delucchi, Kevin L., Tsoh, Janice Y., Mathews, Carol A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6240798/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30480164
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.conctc.2018.11.003
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author Martin, Anna M.
Zakrzewski, Jessica J.
Chou, Chia-Ying
Uhm, Soo Y.
Gause, R. Michael
Chan, Joanne
Eckfield, Monika
Salazar, Mark
Vigil, Ofilio
Bain, David
Stark, Sandra J.
Mackin, R. Scott
Vega, Eduardo
Delucchi, Kevin L.
Tsoh, Janice Y.
Mathews, Carol A.
author_facet Martin, Anna M.
Zakrzewski, Jessica J.
Chou, Chia-Ying
Uhm, Soo Y.
Gause, R. Michael
Chan, Joanne
Eckfield, Monika
Salazar, Mark
Vigil, Ofilio
Bain, David
Stark, Sandra J.
Mackin, R. Scott
Vega, Eduardo
Delucchi, Kevin L.
Tsoh, Janice Y.
Mathews, Carol A.
author_sort Martin, Anna M.
collection PubMed
description This study compares the effectiveness of approaches used to recruit a diverse sample for a randomized clinical trial for Hoarding Disorder (HD) in the San Francisco Bay Area. Of the 632 individuals who inquired about the study, 313 were randomized and 231 completed treatment. Most participants heard about the study via flyering (N = 161), followed by advocacy groups (N = 113), word of mouth (N = 84), health care professionals (N = 78), online (N = 68), and media (N = 11). However, those that heard about the study via advertising methods, such as flyers, were less likely to complete the study, p = .01, while those recruited via advocacy groups were most likely to be randomized, p = .03. No source proved more effective in recruiting underrepresented groups such as men, p = .60; non-whites, p = .49; or Hispanics, p = .97. Advertising recruited the youngest individuals, p < 0.001, and word of mouth was most likely to recruit unemployed, disabled, or retired individuals, p = .01. Thus, results suggest an ongoing multimodal approach is likely to be most effective in both soliciting and retaining a diverse sample. Future studies should compare recruitment methods across greater geographical regions too, as well as in terms of financial and human costs.
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spelling pubmed-62407982018-11-26 Recruiting under-represented populations into psychiatric research: Results from the help for hoarding study Martin, Anna M. Zakrzewski, Jessica J. Chou, Chia-Ying Uhm, Soo Y. Gause, R. Michael Chan, Joanne Eckfield, Monika Salazar, Mark Vigil, Ofilio Bain, David Stark, Sandra J. Mackin, R. Scott Vega, Eduardo Delucchi, Kevin L. Tsoh, Janice Y. Mathews, Carol A. Contemp Clin Trials Commun Article This study compares the effectiveness of approaches used to recruit a diverse sample for a randomized clinical trial for Hoarding Disorder (HD) in the San Francisco Bay Area. Of the 632 individuals who inquired about the study, 313 were randomized and 231 completed treatment. Most participants heard about the study via flyering (N = 161), followed by advocacy groups (N = 113), word of mouth (N = 84), health care professionals (N = 78), online (N = 68), and media (N = 11). However, those that heard about the study via advertising methods, such as flyers, were less likely to complete the study, p = .01, while those recruited via advocacy groups were most likely to be randomized, p = .03. No source proved more effective in recruiting underrepresented groups such as men, p = .60; non-whites, p = .49; or Hispanics, p = .97. Advertising recruited the youngest individuals, p < 0.001, and word of mouth was most likely to recruit unemployed, disabled, or retired individuals, p = .01. Thus, results suggest an ongoing multimodal approach is likely to be most effective in both soliciting and retaining a diverse sample. Future studies should compare recruitment methods across greater geographical regions too, as well as in terms of financial and human costs. Elsevier 2018-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC6240798/ /pubmed/30480164 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.conctc.2018.11.003 Text en © 2018 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Martin, Anna M.
Zakrzewski, Jessica J.
Chou, Chia-Ying
Uhm, Soo Y.
Gause, R. Michael
Chan, Joanne
Eckfield, Monika
Salazar, Mark
Vigil, Ofilio
Bain, David
Stark, Sandra J.
Mackin, R. Scott
Vega, Eduardo
Delucchi, Kevin L.
Tsoh, Janice Y.
Mathews, Carol A.
Recruiting under-represented populations into psychiatric research: Results from the help for hoarding study
title Recruiting under-represented populations into psychiatric research: Results from the help for hoarding study
title_full Recruiting under-represented populations into psychiatric research: Results from the help for hoarding study
title_fullStr Recruiting under-represented populations into psychiatric research: Results from the help for hoarding study
title_full_unstemmed Recruiting under-represented populations into psychiatric research: Results from the help for hoarding study
title_short Recruiting under-represented populations into psychiatric research: Results from the help for hoarding study
title_sort recruiting under-represented populations into psychiatric research: results from the help for hoarding study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6240798/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30480164
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.conctc.2018.11.003
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