| Literature DB >> 26969505 |
Jerry Okal1, Henry F Raymond2, Waimar Tun3, Helgar Musyoki4, Sufia Dadabhai5, Dita Broz6, Joan Nyamu7, David Kuria8, Nicholas Muraguri9, Scott Geibel3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Respondent-driven sampling (RDS) is used in a variety of settings to study hard-to-reach populations at risk for HIV and sexually transmitted infections. However, practices leading to successful recruitment among diverse populations in low-resource settings are seldom reported. We implemented the first, integrated, bio-behavioural surveillance survey among men who have sex with men, female sex workers and people who injected drugs in Nairobi, Kenya.Entities:
Keywords: Female sex workers (FSW); Field experiences; Men who have sex with men (MSM); People who injected drugs (PWID); Respondent-driven sampling (RDS)
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26969505 PMCID: PMC4788831 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-016-1965-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1Recruitment of men who have sex with men in Nairobi (N = 569 including seeds). Recruitment was initiated by six seeds who issued 1478 coupons, 691 were returned and out of these 563 met eligibility criteria for study participation and were enrolled in the study. The waves of recruitment per seed ranged from 1 to 23, and the mean network size was 77, while the median was 8 (IQR: 4, 20). Larger circles indicate seed participants
Fig. 2Recruitment of female sex workers, Nairobi 2010–2011 (n = 601 including seeds). Five seeds initiated recruitment and issued 1219 coupons, 632 were returned of which 596 (94.3 %) met eligibility criteria and were enrolled in the study. The median network size was 8 female sex workers (IQR 4–20). The waves of recruitment per seed ranged from 18 to 62. Larger circles indicate seed participants
Fig. 3Recruitment of people who inject drugs in Nairobi, 2011 (n = 275 including seeds). Recruitment of IDUs was initiated by six seeds who distributed 473 coupons, 352 were returned to the study site and a total of 269 individuals met eligibility criteria for study participation and were enrolled (76.4 % eligibility rate of returned coupons). Larger circles indicate seed participants
Practicalities of the study and theoretical fit with RDS
| Population | Topic | Issue | Solution | Fit with RDS | Helped success |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSM and FSW | Study site | Need for confidential comfortable acceptable study site within budgetary constraints | “Hide” study site in plain view at a public space that because of extensive foot traffic and nature of environment made KP invisible | One study office reduces potential for duplicate enrollment that is a potential issue with multiple study sites | Contributed to willingness of KP to participate thus obtaining sample size |
| MSM | High socio-economic status (SES) MSM | Concerted efforts made but it was difficult to recruit high SES MSM and FSW | Conduct rigorous formative assessment to understand the context of high SES MSM | Ensures high SES subgroups are recruited | Ensures participation of diverse population sub groups |
| Recruitment monitoring | Weekly monitoring of respondent characteristics | Use of NetDraw helped illustrate recruitment patterns | Ensures recruitment flaws are addressed | Helped identify recruitment gaps | |
| IDU | Study site | Accessibility | Provide transport from pick up points in specific neighborhoods | Reduced need for multiple study sites | Increased participation |
| Recruitment monitoring | Weekly monitoring of respondent characteristics | Use of NetDraw helped illustrate recruitment patterns | Ensures recruitment gaps are filled | Helped identify flaws recruitment gaps | |
| FSW | Coupons | Too rapid sample accrual overwhelming site capacity | Reduce number of coupons to one per recruiter | Ensures balance to RDS recruitment chains | Better penetration of study population |
| High SES FSW and those working in brothels | We made efforts but failed to recruit high SES FSW and those working in brothels | Conduct more rigorous formative assessment to understand the context of high SES FSW and those working in brothels | Ensures high SES subgroups are recruited | Ensures participation of more hidden population groups | |
| Addressing unique needs of participants | Being sensitive and understanding the needs of participants | Provision of milk to children who accompanied their mothers and helping out with caring for children | Potentially ensured participation of women who had children | Increased participation | |
| Recruitment monitoring | Weekly monitoring of respondent characteristics | Use of NetDraw helped illustrate recruitment patterns | Ensures recruitment gaps are filled | Ensures coupon issuance was controlled and recruitment gaps are filled |