| Literature DB >> 20175903 |
Sarah E Forster1, Laura Jones, John M Saxton, Daniel J Flower, Gemma Foulds, Hilary J Powers, Stuart G Parker, A Graham Pockley, Elizabeth A Williams.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The success of a human intervention trial depends upon the ability to recruit eligible volunteers. Many trials fail because of unrealistic recruitment targets and flawed recruitment strategies. In order to predict recruitment rates accurately, researchers need information on the relative success of various recruitment strategies. Few published trials include such information and the number of participants screened or approached is not always cited.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20175903 PMCID: PMC2843618 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-10-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Participant involvement in the FIT study
| Involvement required from participants | Associated activity |
|---|---|
| 1 home visit | Orientation to the study, informed written consent, explain food diary ~1 hour |
| 3 hospital visits for assessments: | Questionnaires, bloods, anthropometric measures, checking food diary ~1 hour per assessment |
| 1 hospital visit for vaccination | Bloods, vaccination ~30 min |
| Completion of symptoms and illness diary for 6 months | Weekly ~10 min |
| Completion of 3 food diaries for 4 days each (recording of food and drink eaten) | Daily ~30 min for 4 days on 3 occasions |
| Consumption of tablet or specific foods for 3 months (food was paid for by the trial and was delivered to the participants home) | Swallowing of tablet or consumption of provided food over the week for 12 weeks |
| Eight telephone calls at intervals throughout study | Interviewed re: health and consumption of food (if on food group) ~10 min each call |
Figure 1Number of participants screened and started on the trial including reasons for exclusions.
Key messages for recruitment of older people to trials
| Set realistic recruitment targets |
|---|
| Include time for setting up recruitment initiatives |
| Include time for screening |
| Include time for known periods when recruitment might be lower (holidays, seasonal differences, annual leave) |
| Reassess recruitment strategy once the study as started and be prepared to change accordingly |
| Be aware of individual participant needs |
| Where possible use the same researcher to assess the participant throughout the study |
| Where ever possible include all suitable recruits/avoid recruitment bias |