| Literature DB >> 28148535 |
Brian McKinstry1, Frank M Sullivan2, Shobna Vasishta3, Roma Armstrong4, Janet Hanley5, John Haughney6,4, Sam Philip7, Blair H Smith8, Amanda Wood9, Colin N A Palmer10.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Recruitment to trials is often difficult. Many trials fail to meet recruitment targets resulting in underpowered studies which waste resources and the time of those who participated. While there is evidence that many people are willing to take part in research, particularly if it involves a condition from which they suffer, researchers are unable to easily contact such people often relying on busy clinicians to identify them. Many clinicians perceive themselves as too busy to take part in research activities. The Scottish Health Research Register SHARE adopts an approach which asks the public to consent to their data held in National Health Service databases to be used to determine their suitability for research projects. Additionally, participants can consent for spare blood, left after routine venepuncture to be automatically identified in the laboratory and stored for future research studies. PARTICIPANTS: Anyone over the age of 16 years in Scotland can participate. Participants are approached through a range of methods including directly at outpatient clinics and general practitioners practices, leaflets with hospital letters and personal email from employers. FINDINGS TO DATE: SHARE has recruited around 130 000 people. SHARE has demonstrated that it can quickly and efficiently recruit to studies, over 20 until now. In addition, it can be used to administer questionnaire studies by email and recruit to patient and public involvement groups. FUTURE PLANS: SHARE continues to steadily recruit with the ambition of eventually achieving 1 000 000 people in Scotland. We are steadily increasing the number of data sets we use for identifying participants. We are adding a mobile app which will facilitate dissemination about research and allow the collection of physiological and activity data if desired. We anticipate that SHARE will soon become the main source of health research recruitment in Scotland. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/.Entities:
Keywords: Recruitment; research registers; trials
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28148535 PMCID: PMC5293989 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-013351
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1SHARE reaches 100 000 registrants.
Figure 2Scottish linked data sets. Currently, data from hospital discharges, hospital outpatient attendances and primary care prescribing data sets are those most widely used by SHARE. NHS, National Health Service.
Figure 3Interception of spare blood for genomic research using SHARE.
Recruitment methods to SHARE
| Recruitment method | Strengths | Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|
| Face-to-face recruitment in OPD and GP | High sign-up rate (around 90% of those approached agree to join), improves visibility of research within the NHS | Labour intensive, recruiter dependent |
| Letters included with OPD appointments | Return rate 10%. Where accompanied by personal letter from consultant, it rises to 17%. | Relies on goodwill of appointments staff. Time of NHS admin staff, until now, has been given free but cost may be a consideration in the longer term |
| Direct email from institution lead | Low cost, quick sign-up, most of whom have viable email addresses which facilitates future contacts. Around 10% sign up. | Can only really be performed infrequently. Most larger organisations prefer to advertise SHARE in internal staff news magazines, but this diminishes impact. |
| Advertising on Radio | Wide audience reach. Advertisements may raise awareness which improves uptake when participants are approached face to face. | Expensive and not clear to what extent it contributes to overall participation. |
| Facebook advertisements | Targets a younger audience than that of OPD clinics | Large numbers of website clicks but relatively few sign-ups |
GP, general practitioner; OPD, outpatient department; NHS, National Health Service.
Figure 4Current age, sex distribution of the SHARE cohort.
Examples of SHARE involvement in recruitment to different types of study challenge
| Study | Challenge | Detail | Number approached | Number delivered to researcher | Number entered into study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Required data from both primary and secondary care | This study sought to recruit people with osteoarthritis and knee pain who had not been on NSAIDs, ACE inhibitors or spironolactone. They required eight additional participants before a 2-week deadline | 25 | 16 | 8 | |
| Rescue before recruitment closure | This study required recently diagnosed people with diabetes within 3 weeks before study closure | 12 | 8 | 2 | |
| Large-scale survey | Complex survey exploring preferences for presentation of risk which had struggled
to get responses. 20% response was desired. | 50 000 | 16 266 viewed full email, 9183 clicked and attempted survey | Over 2000 completed. | |
| H. PYLORI | Anticipated high refusal rate | Study which required 150 healthy volunteers willing to undergo endoscopy | 1400 | 251 | 150 |
| REFORM— | Finding people with multiple morbidity | Research into the Effect Of SGLT2 inhibition on left ventricular remodelling in patients with heart failure and diabetes mellitus | 63 | 27 | 15 |
NSAIDs, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.