| Literature DB >> 31399134 |
Emma Elizabeth Phelps1, Elizabeth Tutton2,3,4, Xavier Griffin1, Janis Baird5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Qualitative research has been used to explore patients' and healthcare professionals' experiences of surgical randomised controlled trials (RCTs). From this research, reasons why patients accept or decline participation and barriers to engaging clinicians in trials have been identified. In a trauma setting, recruitment to surgical trials can be particularly difficult as patients may require urgent treatment and their ability to consider their options, ask questions and reach a decision may be hindered by the impact of their injury. Little research, however, has explored patients' and healthcare professionals' experiences of surgical RCTs in a trauma setting. This study aimed to understand patients' and staff's experiences of an orthopaedic trauma trial.Entities:
Keywords: Experience; Interviews; Qualitative; Recruitment; Trials
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31399134 PMCID: PMC6688236 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-019-3597-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Participant characteristics
| Participant | Age (years) | Pre-fracture mobility | Time since surgery | Interviewed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participant 1 | 60–69 | Freely mobile without aids | 2 months; 6.5 months | Patient |
| Participant 2 | 70–79 | Some indoor mobility but never outside without help | 10 days; 2 months | Patient |
| Participant 3 | 80–89 | Some indoor mobility but never outside without help | 7 days; 5 months | Patient |
| Participant 4 | 90–99 | Mobile outdoors with one aid | 2.5 months | Consultee |
| Participant 5 | 80–89 | Mobile outdoors with one aid | 3 months | Patient |
| Participant 6 | 50–59 | Mobile outdoors with one aid | 1.5 months | Patient |
| Participant 7 | 60–69 | Mobile outdoors with one aid | 4 months | Patient |
| Participant 8 | 60–69 | Freely mobile without aids | 5 months | Patient |
| Participant 9 | Unknown | Mobile outdoors with one aid | 4.5 months | Patient |
| Participant 10 | 80–89 | Some indoor mobility but never outside without help | 3 months | Patient with help from consultee |
| Participant 11 | 90–99 | Mobile outdoors with one aid | 5 months | Consultee |
The codes, categories and themes within facilitating trial recruitment
| Theme | Category | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Navigating research with patients after orthopaedic trauma | Making sense of the study | Recall |
| Randomisation | ||
| Confusion and therapeutic misconception | ||
| Enabling participation | Assessing capacity | |
| Involving family | ||
| Consultees | ||
| Knowing it’s the right decision | Interpreting the eligibility criteria | Believing few patients are eligible |
| Excluding eligible patients | ||
| Surgeon preference | Appropriateness of interventions | |
| Surgical skill and experience | ||
| Collective preferences | ||
| Community equipoise | Accepting community equipoise | |
| Difficulty with individual equipoise | ||
| Making it work | Juggling activities | Minimising the impact of research on clinical staff |
| Helping patients | ||
| Balancing their own beliefs with their recruiting role | Patient care | |
| Appropriateness of participation | ||
| Equipoise | ||
| Research culture | Participation in other studies | |
| Communication | ||
| Research team |