| Literature DB >> 23496916 |
Erica T Warner1, Russell E Glasgow, Karen M Emmons, Gary G Bennett, Sandy Askew, Bernard Rosner, Graham A Colditz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Obesity and hypertension and their associated health complications disproportionately affect communities of color and people of lower socioeconomic status. Recruitment and retention of these populations in research trials, and retention in weight loss trials has been an ongoing challenge.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23496916 PMCID: PMC3599817 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1CONSORT flow diagram of health center selection, participant screening, eligibility and retention: Be Fit, Be Well Study.
Figure 2Weekly number of screening calls completed and randomized participants by implementation date of recruitment strategies.
Be Fit, Be Well recruitment strategies and results
| Identify potentially eligible participants through medical record review | • Difficult to maintain large pool of potential participants for contact | 1. Provider referral: providers could submit participants via faxed or emailed referral form; drop boxes for referrals placed in | 1. Received less than 20 provider referrals. Most were people already identified through medical record review; |
| 2. Patient self-referral: flyers were placed in waiting and patient rooms with brief study description and contact information; | 2. Received no inquiries from patient self-referral | ||
| 3. Refer-a-friend: enrolled participants were asked to tell their friends about the study; | 3. Received less than 10 suggestions from enrolled participants. Most were ineligible. | ||
| 4. Newspaper ads: Two ads were run in a publication that was distributed to people riding public transportation; one in paper serving the African-American community; Another in a Spanish language paper serving the Hispanic/Latino community | 4. Received less than 20 inquiries from newspaper ads. Most were not patients at one of the three health centers and were ineligible. One person was ultimately enrolled. | ||
| >95% of enrolled participants were identified via medical record review | |||
| Participant names submitted to their primary medical provider for approval to contact for study enrollment | • Long delays in receipt of provider approval | 1. Implemented passive provider approval system. We divided patients into ‘Needs Confirmation’ and ‘Confirmed’ groups. Based on medical record review, patients in the ‘Confirmed’ group met all eligibility criteria and were free of diabetes, CVD and peripheral vascular disease. Providers had the option to exclude patients from this list, but we initiated patient contact after 10 business days if providers had not responded. The ‘Needs Confirmation’ group included people with at least one of the aforementioned health conditions. This group still required explicit approval from providers before contact. | 1. Prior to passive approval, we had submitted 431 names to providers and had received a response on 212 (49.1%) of them. With passive approval in place, there were just 29 still awaiting provider approval at the end of recruitment. Providers also expressed appreciation for the passive process that, given their demanding schedules, reduced their study related workload considerably. |
| Passive approval decreased time from patient identification to initial contact significantly. | |||
| Approved participants sent introductory letter and called by research assistants to confirm eligibility using contact information in medical records | • Incorrect contact information; | 1. Collaborated with health center administrative staff to obtain regular updates of patient contact information; | 1. Health center staff generally did not have more up to date contact information than what they had originally provided us; |
| Large number of calls (> 4000) required to garner each scheduled baseline visit | 2. Purchased subscription to online people search website to find new addresses and phone numbers for potential participants; | 2. Website provide correct contact information for some potential participants; | |
| 3. Mailed potentially eligible participants a self-addressed, postage-paid card with our contact phone number which requested the three best times to call, best phone number to use and phone number type (home, work, cell), any alternate phone numbers. Card completion qualified them for a $75 Target gift card raffle. | 3. Few cards were returned among participants with incorrect phone numbers. Many were returned to sender as incorrect phone numbers were highly correlated with incorrect mailing addresses. | ||
| 4. Hired an off-site call center to make intake calls. Trained survey assistants at the University of Massachusetts Amherst Survey Research Center made all English calls. Research assistants continued to make calls in Spanish. | 4. Call center improved the weekly call volume and allowed the research assistants to focus on other recruitment tasks. | ||
| 454 (17%) potentially eligible participants had never been reached at the end of recruitment. | |||
| Two research assistants responsible for completion of all baseline and follow-up assessments | • Baseline and follow-up visits occurring simultaneously | 1. Hired and trained short-term part-time staff to help with completion of baseline and follow-up visits | 1. Seven short-term staff were largely students hired through institutional internship programs. Generally there were only two working during any given time period, but there was one 3-month period with four. Each short-term staff member underwent training and certification in measuring height, weight and blood pressure, shadowed the full-time RAs for 2–3 visits, and led their first three visits with a full-time RA present to ensure data quality. |
| They greatly facilitated completion of visits, particularly during a point when baseline, 6-month and 12-month visits were all ongoing. |
Be Fit, Be Well retention strategies and results
| RAs call participants from their assigned health center two weeks before an upcoming follow-up appointment, one-week before and the day of to confirm. Calls made during day, evenings and weekends to home, cell and work numbers | • Unable to reach participant | 1. Prepaid phones for research assistants to facilitate evening and weekend calls; | 1. RA night and weekend calls increased with use of prepaid phones; |
| 2. RAs called participants not from their primary health center; | 2. Calls to participants from different research assistants were not effective | ||
| 3. $5 Gift card mailing to request updated contact information; | 3. $5 gift card mailings yielded few updates to contact information. Most of the people that responded were people for whom we already had correct information; | ||
| 4. Surveyed participants on economic hardships at 24-month visit to understand the role this may have played; | 4. Of the 144 participants surveyed, 39 (27.3%) said their phone had been disconnected in the past 24-months. | ||
| RAs attempt to contact participants with missed appointments by phone, email and mail. | • Repeated missed appointments | 1. RAs met patient at clinic when scheduled to see their provider and measure weight only | 1. Difficult to coordinate schedules to be at clinic for patient doctor appointments; Some patients not keeping appointments with BFBW were also not seeing their provider. |
| Missed follow-up visits for participants inactive in the intervention arm | 2. Primary care provider reengagement message; | 2. Provider reengagement messages were not consistently delivered to participants. Providers found it hard to keep track of who was in need of messaging; | |
| 3. Offered gift cards from missed visits as incentive to complete last visit; | 3. Of the 158 people eligible to receive gift cards from missed visits, 108 completed their 24-month visit; 52 of those completions occurred after the mailing; | ||
| 4. Taxi vouchers; | 4. Taxi vouchers were used by less than 20 participants overall. Those using vouchers tended to be elderly and were generally reliant on family members for transportation; | ||
| 5. Home visits at 24-months only | 5. Completed a total of five home visits. In response to our offer of coming to their home, several people said things like, ‘You don’t have to go to all that trouble. I can come to the clinic.’ Several of these people did complete their visit at the clinic. | ||
| 6. Use any clinic measured weight within three months of the scheduled assessment date | 6. We were able to get clinic weights for several participants. However, many patients that missed appointments with BFBW also were not seeing their PCP. | ||
| 7. Community health workers (CHW) help with scheduling. | 7. Among those intervention participants in contact with their CHW, having the CHW give reminders about upcoming follow-up visits and help reschedule missed visits was successful. | ||
| Maintain participant contact with holiday and birthday cards | Disengagement among participants | 1. Each quarter we sent out a newsletter with our contact information, updates on the study and an appeal to complete study visits to all participants. It included health articles like how to avoid overindulging during the holidays or ways to get out and enjoy Boston in the spring. | 1. Quarterly newsletters were well received and occasionally prompted a phone call from a participant trying to find out if they were supposed to come in for a follow-up visit soon; |
| 2. Social gatherings were held quarterly. To prevent unblinding, only intervention participants and control participants that had completed the program were invited. We encouraged to bringing family and friends. | 2. We held four social gatherings and each had between 25–50 attendees. Those that came reported that they enjoyed themselves. | ||
| Follow-up visits occur at health centers in assigned BFBW space or in available patient exam rooms | Difficult to maintain consistent space for follow-up visits at health centers | 1. Space administrators were given a copy of our visit schedule a week in advance for space planning. Front desk staff was provided with a BFBW info card and the RA contact information. Each day they received a list of expected participants. We placed removable placards on the door of our visit space that announced that it was in use by BFBW and included a schedule for the day. | 1. Communication with staff on the part of the project director and the research assistants was essential. These relationships greatly facilitated our ability to complete follow-up visits at the clinics. |
Retention percentages by baseline participant characteristics in Be Fit, Be Well trial
| 365 (100.0) | 272 (74.5) | 253 (69.3) | 245(67.1) | 314 (86.0) | |
| | | | | | |
| Usual care | 185 (50.7) | 141 (76.2) | 139 (75.1)** | 133 (71.9)* | 166 (89.7)* |
| Intervention | 180 (49.3) | 131 (72.8) | 114 (63.3) | 112 (62.2) | 148 (82.2) |
| | | | | | |
| <50 | 97 (26.6) | 66 (68.0)* | 58 (59.8)* | 51 (52.6)** | 79 (81.4) |
| 50-59 | 91 (24.9) | 70 (76.9) | 68 (74.7) | 65 (71.4) | 81 (89.0) |
| 60-69 | 93 (25.4) | 75 (80.7) | 72 (77.4) | 74 (79.6) | 81 (87.1) |
| ≥ 70 | 84 (23.0) | 61 (72.6) | 55 (65.5) | 55 (65.5) | 73 (86.9) |
| | | | | | |
| Female | 250 (68.5) | 186 (74.4) | 177 (70.8) | 178 (71.2)* | 222 (88.8)* |
| Male | 115 (31.5) | 86 (74.8) | 76 (66.1) | 67 (58.3) | 92 (80.0) |
| | | | | | |
| Black | 260 (71.2) | 198 (76.2) | 187 (71.9) | 183 (70.4) | 225 (86.5) |
| Hispanic | 48 (13.2) | 35 (72.9) | 32 (66.7) | 23 (47.9)* | 40 (83.3) |
| White or other | 57 (15.6) | 39 (68.4) | 34 (59.7) | 39 (68.4) | 49 (86.0) |
| | | | | | |
| English | 318 (87.1) | 238 (74.8) | 220 (69.2) | 217 (68.2) | 274 (86.2) |
| Spanish | 47 (12.9) | 34 (72.3) | 33 (70.2) | 28 (59.6) | 40 (85.1) |
| | | | | | |
| A | 158 (43.3) | 122 (77.2) | 119 (75.3) | 116 (73.4) | 138 (87.3) |
| B | 103 (28.2) | 77 (74.6) | 64 (62.1)* | 65 (63.1) | 87 (84.5) |
| C | 104 (28.5) | 73 (70.2) | 70 (67.3) | 64 (61.5) | 89 (85.6) |
| | | | | | |
| < High school | 120 (32.9) | 83 (69.2) | 85 (70.8) | 76 (63.3) | 102 (85.0) |
| High school graduate | 109 (29.9) | 79 (72.5) | 71 (65.1) | 71(65.1) | 97 (89.0) |
| Some college or college graduate | 136 (37.3) | 110 (80.9) | 97 (71.3) | 98 (72.1) | 115 (84.6) |
| | | | | | |
| Employed or student | 196 (53.7) | 149 (76.0) | 133 (67.9) | 131 (66.8) | 169 (86.2) |
| Unemployed or disabled | 110 (30.1) | 83 (75.5) | 83 (75.5)* | 78 (70.9) | 95 (86.4) |
| Homemaker or retired | 59 (16.2) | 40 (67.8) | 37 (62.7) | 36 (61.0) | 50 (84.8) |
| | | | | | |
| <10,000 | 95 (26.0) | 61 (64.2)* | 66 (69.5) | 64 (67.4) | 81 (85.3) |
| 10,000-19,999 | 73 (20.0) | 58 (79.5) | 51 (69.9) | 48 (65.6) | 65 (89.0) |
| 20,000-34,999 | 88 (24.1) | 65 (73.9) | 59 (67.1) | 56 (63.6) | 75 (85.2) |
| ≥ 35,000 | 109 (29.9) | 88 (80.7) | 77 (70.6) | 77 (70.6) | 93 (84.4) |
| | | | | | |
| High | 24 (6.6) | 16 (66.7) | 17 (70.8) | 16 (66.7) | 19 (79.2) |
| Low | 341 (93.4) | 256 (75.1) | 236 (69.2) | 229 (67.2) | 295 (86.2) |
| | | | | | |
| Never | 203 (55.6) | 157 (77.3) | 145 (71.4) | 138 (68.0) | 178 (87.7) |
| Former | 97 (26.6) | 72 (74.2) | 68 (70.1) | 65 (67.0) | 83 (85.6) |
| Current | 65 (17.8) | 43 (66.2) | 40 (61.5)* | 42 (64.6) | 53 (81.5) |
| | | | | | |
| Excellent or very good | 107 (29.3) | 77 (72.0) | 70 (65.4) | 69 (64.5) | 87 (81.3) |
| Good | 127 (34.8) | 101 (79.5) | 91 (71.7) | 86 (67.7) | 111 (87.4) |
| Fair or poor | 131 (35.9) | 94 (71.8) | 92 (70.2) | 90 (68.7) | 116 (88.6) |
* P<0.05 when adjusted for all other variables in table; **p<0.01 when adjusted for all other variables in table.