| Literature DB >> 21453543 |
Matthew J Page1, Simon D French, Joanne E McKenzie, Denise A O'Connor, Sally E Green.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recruitment of patients by health professionals is reported as one of the most challenging steps when undertaking studies in primary care settings. Numerous investigations of the barriers to patient recruitment in trials which recruit patients to receive an intervention have been published. However, we are not aware of any studies that have reported on the recruitment barriers as perceived by health professionals to recruiting patients into cluster randomised trials where patients do not directly receive an intervention. This particular subtype of cluster trial is commonly termed a professional-cluster trial. The aim of this study was to investigate factors that contributed to general practitioners recruitment of patients in a professional-cluster trial which evaluated the effectiveness of an intervention to increase general practitioners adherence to a clinical practice guideline for acute low-back pain.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21453543 PMCID: PMC3076278 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-11-35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Figure 1Patient recruitment process for the IMPLEMENT cluster randomised trial.
Figure 2General practitioner questionnaire about patient recruitment.
General practice and general practitioner baseline characteristics
| Participated in patient recruitment and posted questionnaire | Dropped out of CRT prior to patient recruitment | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of practices | 81 | 11 | ||
| Number of GPs per practice (SD) | 81 | 5 (3.8) | 11 | 6 (4.1) |
| No. (%) rural practices | 81 | 29 (36) | 11 | 2 (18) |
| No. (%) with x-ray facility on site | 80 | 3 (4) | 9 | 1 (11) |
| No. (%) of industrial practices | 81 | 7 (9) | 9 | 0 (0) |
| No. (%) of training practices | 80 | 51 (64) | 9 | 6 (67) |
| Method of billing: | 76 | 9 | ||
| No. (%) Bulk bill | 12 (16) | 1 (11) | ||
| No. (%) Co-payment | 64 (84) | 8 (89) | ||
| Number | 94 | 18 | ||
| Mean age (years) (SD) | 93 | 54 (10.3) | 8 | 55 (14.1) |
| No. (%) female | 93 | 33 (35) | 10 | 4 (40) |
| Mean number of years since graduated (SD) | 93 | 30 (10.2) | 8 | 31 (14.5) |
| No. (%) with special interest in low-back pain | 93 | 16 (17) | 8 | 0 (0) |
| No. (%) undertaken LBP continuing education in past year | 92 | 10 (11) | 8 | 1 (12) |
| Mean number of patients seen per week (SD) | 92 | 126 (55.4) | 8 | 129 (61.6) |
| Mean number of LBP patients seen per week (SD) (averaged over the previous month) [Median; IQR] | 90 | 12 (17.7) [8; 4 to 10] | 8 | 11 (5.4) [10; 9 to 12] |
| No. (%) who are members of local GP Division | 93 | 87 (93) | 8 | 7 (87) |
CRT = Cluster randomised trial; SD = standard deviation; GPs = general practitioners; IQR = Interquartile range [25th percentile - 75th percentile]
General practitioners' responses to patient recruitment items in the survey
| GP intended to invite eligible patients to participate in the study | 67 | 5.6 | 5.2 - 5.9 | 6 | 5 - 6.5 |
| GP did not see eligible patients during the study period | 66 | 2.7 | 2.3 - 3.1 | 2 | 1 - 3.9 |
| GP did not recall seeing patient recruitment materials in the practice | 66 | 3.1 | 2.7 - 3.6 | 3 | 1.6 - 4 |
| GP forgot to approach eligible patients to participate in the study | 67 | 4.4 | 4.0 - 4.8 | 5 | 3.3 - 6 |
| GP approached patients to participate, but they were not interested | 67 | 3.5 | 3.1 - 3.9 | 4 | 2 - 5 |
* Scored on a 7-point Likert scale from strongly disagree (1) to strongly agree (7)
Main themes identified from open-ended question, with illustrative quotes
| Theme | Illustrative quote |
|---|---|
| Time constraints | "I intended to try to recruit patients but I think there is too much going on during the consultation to assess LBP that to add to it by discussing a 'study' would have been information overload. So unfortunately, recruiting for your study was the first thing to go - just not enough time for everything in general practice." |
| Few eligible patients | "Most of my patients have chronic LBP and were not eligible for the study. Only a couple I encountered who were eligible." |
| Forgot to recruit patients | "It probably would have helped to have a few reminder emails. I tried to make myself remember by putting up a sign at eye level beside my computer, but that didn't help." |
| Confusion about recruitment strategies | "All the documentation and stamps arrived. My understanding was that your researcher or office would contact our office manager to explain the study. This did not occur. I was left without direction." |
| Lack of patient interest | "Few patients were approached and not interested, then I lost the interest." |
| Lack of patient incentives | "Suggest a free physiotherapy appointment/or better still a $30 petrol voucher for their time if complete survey. You would be inundated." |