| Literature DB >> 26607762 |
J Fleming1, A Kamal2, E Harrison3, T Hamborg4, S Stewart-Brown5, M Thorogood6, F Griffiths7, W Robertson8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recruitment to trials evaluating the effectiveness of childhood obesity management interventions is challenging. We report our experience of recruitment to the Families for Health study, a randomised controlled trial evaluating the effectiveness of a family-based community programme for children aged 6-11 years, versus usual care. We evaluated the effectiveness of active recruitment (contacting eligible families directly) versus passive recruitment (informing the community through flyers, public events, media).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26607762 PMCID: PMC4660776 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-015-1062-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Participant recruitment to Families for Health study
Recruitment methods and outcomes
| Recruitment method | Amount or number of times | Associated cost of recruitment method | Number of families enquiring about the studya | Number of families recruited | Enquiries who were recruited |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Active methods | |||||
| Referral from health professional | Health professionals (e.g. school nurses, hospital and community paediatricians, GPs, dieticians) were sent information and some professional meetings were attended by researchers (all sites) | Cost to health professional: excess treatment costs | 69 | 30 | 43.5 % |
| 65 health professionals telephoned us with details of a potential family (from across all sites) | |||||
| On four occasions, a researcher attended an obesity clinic and the doctor referred families to the researcher (hospital covering Sites A and B) | Researcher time: 4 × ½ day plus travel | ||||
| Targeted letter from health professional | Families for Health information provided with NCMP letter to overweight and obese children from year 6 (age 10–11 years) ( | Postage | 16 | 13 | 81.3 % |
| 50 letters were sent by GPs to families of children identified on GP lists as being overweight or obese (Site C) | |||||
| 50 letters sent by Change4Life advisor to families on their case list (Site B) | |||||
| Sub-total | 85 | 43 | 50.6 % | ||
| Passive methods | |||||
| School (poster, newsletter, flyer) | All primary schools in Sites B and C contacted twice, in Site C three times. | Researcher time for first contact: 2 days, second and third: ½ day | 30 | 24 | 80 % |
| Contacts were a phone call on the first occasion, then emails. Flyers were sent out as requested by the schools. All schools were sent text that could be included in a school newsletter. | |||||
| Postage or travel for delivering flyers | |||||
| GP/hospital (poster, flyer) | Posters and flyers were sent to local primary-care surgeries and hospitals × 2 (all sites) | Postage | 25 | 19 | 76 % |
| Community (poster, flyer) | Posters were sent to community venues such as libraries, children’s centres and leisure centres × 3 (all sites) | Postage | 5 | 4 | 80 % |
| Flyer (unspecified) | Flyers distributed using methods described above but no details from potential participants where flyer was seen | 6 | 2 | 33 % | |
| Public events | 9 events (10 days) across all sites: Site A: 2 events; Site B: 2 events: Site C: 5 events (6 days) | Researcher time (10 days) plus travel to event | 17 | 9 | 52.9 % |
| Researcher attended public health and community events. This involved displaying information about the study, and scales and height meter to measure potential participants’ BMI. Families who had children with a high BMI were given further details of the study and contact details were taken if the family was interested in taking part. | |||||
| Media (newspaper, radio, internet) | 4 radio interviews (Sites A and B) | Free | 9 | 9 | 100 % |
| 2 paid newspaper articles (Site C) | Cost of articles | ||||
| 5 free newspaper or magazine articles (all sites) | No cost incurred | ||||
| Families for Health website | No cost incurred | ||||
| NHS and local authority website, Twitter (all sites) | No cost incurred | ||||
| Local newspaper Twitter feed | No cost incurred | ||||
| 3 adverts in Primary Care Research Network (PCRN) newsletter | No cost incurred | ||||
| Word of mouth | – | No cost incurred | 7 | 5 | 71.4 % |
| Sub-total | 99 | 72 | 72.7 % | ||
| Total | 184 | 115 | 62.5 % | ||
aTen unknown (not included in figures)
Baseline characteristics of participants recruited using active vs passive methods
| Baseline characteristic | Active recruitment | Passive recruitment |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of families | 43 (37.4 %) | 72 (62.6 %) | 0.007 |
| Number of parents/carers | 52 (38.0 %) | 85 (62.0 %) | 0.005 |
| Number of children | 46 (35.9 %) | 82 (64.1 %) | 0.002 |
| Gender of children | 0.616 | ||
| Boys | 24 (52.2 %) | 39 (47.6 %) | |
| Girls | 22 (47.8 %) | 43 (52.4 %) | |
| Mean age of child (years) (SD) | 9.91 (1.61) | 9.18 (1.52) | 0.012 |
| Mean age of parent/carer (years) (SD) | 39.59 (7.19) | 40.46 (7.86) | 0.517 |
| Family typea | 0.162 | ||
| Two-parent family | 20 (46.5 %) | 40 (55.6 %) | |
| Single parent (mother) | 22 (51.2 %) | 24 (33.3 %) | |
| Single parent (father) | 0 (0 %) | 0 (0 %) | |
| Step-family | 1 (2.3 %) | 6 (8.3 %) | |
| Other (e.g. living with other relative) | 0 (0 %) | 2 (2.8 %) | |
| Child ethnicitya | 0.002 | ||
| White | 24 (52.2 %) | 55 (67.1 %) | |
| Black | 0 (0 %) | 10 (12.2 %) | |
| Asian | 13 (28.3 %) | 9 (11.0 %) | |
| Chinese | 0 (0 %) | 0 (0 %) | |
| Mixed | 9 (19.5 %) | 7 (8.5 %) | |
| Other | 0 (0 %) | 1 (1.2 %) | |
| Baseline mean (SD) BMI of child | 27.02 (4.56) | 25.21 (4.13) | 0.024 |
| Baseline BMI z-score (SD) of child | 2.80 (0.85) | 2.66 (0.81) | 0.273 |
| Baseline mean (SD) BMI of parent/carer | 30.19 (5.93) | 33.01 (8.51) | 0.026 |
| Socio-economic status | 0.361 | ||
| Class 1 (higher managerial, administrative and professional occupations) | 14 (32.5 %) | 25 (34.7 %) | |
| Class 2 (intermediate occupations) | 9 (20.9 %) | 10 (13.9 %) | |
| Class 3 (routine and manual occupations) | 10 (23.3 %) | 26 (36.1 %) | |
| Class 4 (never worked) | 10 (23.3 %) | 11 (15.3 %) | |
| Families for Health Attendance ( | |||
| DNAa | 3 (16.7 %) | 11 (29.0 %) | 0.169 |
| Attended at least one sessiona | 15 (83.3 %) | 27 (71.0 %) | 0.169 |
| Completed (at least half) | 12 (66.7 %) | 23 (60.5 %) | 0.658 |
| Completed (all sessions available)a | 3 (16.67 %) | 8 (21.1 %) | 0.268 |
| Usual care attendance ( | |||
| DNA | 13 (61.9 %) | 15 (48.4 %) | 0.337 |
| Attended at least one session | 8 (38.1 %) | 16 (51.6 %) | 0.336 |
DNA did not attend
aFisher’s exact test was used to compare active vs passive recruitment instead of chi-squared test
bSeven missing values for usual care attendance information