| Literature DB >> 27339425 |
Yasha Parikh1,2, Maryann Mason3,4, Karen Williams5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Childhood obesity prevalence has tripled over the last three decades. Pediatric obesity has important implications for both adult health as well as the United States economy. In order to combat pediatric obesity, exploratory studies are necessary to create effective interventions. Recruitment is an essential part of any study, and it has been challenging for all studies, especially pediatric obesity studies. The objective of this study was to understand barriers to pediatric obesity study recruitment and review facilitators to overcome recruitment difficulties.Entities:
Keywords: Pediatric obesity; Qualitative; Strategies; Study recruitment
Year: 2016 PMID: 27339425 PMCID: PMC4919270 DOI: 10.1186/s40169-016-0099-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Med ISSN: 2001-1326
Study settings and their respective recruitment methods reviewed during interviews
| Study setting | Number of studies | Types of recruitment methods used | Study topic |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical | 13 | Clinical provider | Nutrition |
| Community | 2 | Email listserv | Physical activity |
| School | 4 | Brochure | Physical activity |
Fig. 1Barriers separated by context in which they commonly appear
Barriers to recruitment and barrier-specific facilitators
| Barriers | Facilitators |
|---|---|
| Study logistics | Provide transportation to and from clinic |
| Family economics | Provide transportation to and |
| Family logistics | Provide child-care for other children in family |
| Invasive protocols | Extensive risk vs. benefit discussion with participant and family |
| Lack of buy-in from recruitment site | Provide incentives for the recruitment site |
| Time restraint of clinicians | Provide incentives for the clinical site |
| Stigma | Change the discussion from obesity-related language to health-promoting language |
| Uninformed participants or refusing to recognize obesity | Educate parents/caregivers and children about his or her own weight status |
| Groupthink | Buy-in from recruiters who will be presenting to the children (research personnel, school personnel, etc.) |
| Decreased patient motivation and/or interest | Extensive risk vs. benefit discussion with participant and family |