| Literature DB >> 33244430 |
Milton Mickey Eder1,2, Christi A Patten3, Tabetha A Brockman3, Deborah Hendricks2, Miguel Valdez-Soto3, Maria Zavala-Rocha3, Miriam Amelang2, Chung Wi3, Brittny Major-Elechi4, Joyce Joy E Balls-Berry5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Researchers have explored using the internet and social media to recruit participants to specific research projects. Less systematic work has been done to inform the engagement of large populations in virtual communities to advance clinical and translational science. We report on our first step to use social media to engage Minnesota residents by studying the willingness of participants to engage in a virtual (Facebook) community about the concepts of health and health-related research.Entities:
Keywords: Social media; clinical trials; community engagement; recruitment; translational science
Year: 2019 PMID: 33244430 PMCID: PMC7681157 DOI: 10.1017/cts.2019.417
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 2059-8661
Fig. 1.Geographical distribution of survey participants by zipcode.
Minnesota survey participant sociodemographics, social media use, and attitudes toward health research (N = 418)
| Characteristic | % ( |
|---|---|
| Age in years | |
| 18–29 | 37.2 (155) |
| 30–49 | 35.5 (148) |
| 50+ | 27.3 (114) |
| Biological sex | |
| Male | 34.0 (142) |
| Female | 66.0 (276) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 34.0 (142) |
| Female | 65.3 (273) |
| Transgender | 0.2 (1) |
| Genderless | 0.5 (2) |
| Race | |
| White | 78.7 (326) |
| African American | 6.3 (26) |
| Asian | 4.8 (20) |
| American Indian | 1.0 (4) |
| Multiracial | 6.5 (27) |
| Other | 2.7 (11) |
| Hispanic ethnicity | 7.0 (29) |
| Education | |
| Less than high school | 0.5 (2) |
| High school degree/GED | 10.0 (42) |
| Some college | 21.8 (91) |
| Associate degree | 6.0 (25) |
| College degree | 32.5 (136) |
| Graduate degree | 29.2 (122) |
| Residence status | |
| Rural (RUCA code >= 4) | 10.0 (42) |
| Urban (RUCA code 1–3) | 90.0 (376) |
| Estimated median household income | |
| Low ($24,688–$60,805) | 33.7 (140) |
| Medium ($61,340–$74,264) | 34.0 (141) |
| High ($74,342–$120,718) | 32.3 (134) |
| Employment | |
| Student | 16.5 (69) |
| Not employed | 4.8 (20) |
| Retired | 7.2 (30) |
| Employed full- or part-time | 71.5 (298) |
| Marital status | |
| Single (includes divorced/widowed) | 45.9 (192) |
| Married/partnered | 54.1 (226) |
| Health literacy: need assistance to read materials from doctor/pharmacy | |
| Never | 68.7 (287) |
| Rarely | 16.7 (70) |
| Sometimes | 10.3 (43) |
| Often | 2.6 (11) |
| Always | 1.7 (7) |
| Interacted with social media in past 6 months | |
| Never | 2.7 (11) |
| Rarely | 11.6 (48) |
| Once a day | 15.7 (65) |
| Several times/day | 70.0 (289) |
| Created personal profile on social media platform | |
| 61.2 (256) | |
| Snapchat | 50.5 (211) |
| 45.7 (191) | |
| 47.1 (197) | |
| YouTube | 37.8 (158) |
| 20.1 (84) | |
| Ever participated in a health research study | 32.8 (138) |
| “I feel research can benefit my health and/or others (e.g., family, community)” | |
| Strongly disagree | 1.7 (7) |
| Disagree | 0.2 (1) |
| Undecided | 5.3 (22) |
| Agree | 36.2 (151) |
| Strongly agree | 56.6 (236) |
| “There are some things about health research that I do not trust at all” | |
| Strongly disagree | 12.2 (51) |
| Disagree | 25.4 (106) |
| Undecided | 32.8 (137) |
| Agree | 22.2 (93) |
| Strongly agree | 7.4 (31) |
Percentages are based on non-missing data. Some percentages do not add to 100 due to rounding.
Gender endorsement was 98.8 % concordant with biological sex endorsement
Rural-Urban Commuting Area Codes (RUCAs) based on zip code data.
Estimated income based on zip code data. Categories are based on sample distribution of estimated income.
Associations of participant sociodemographics and willingness to be part of a facebook group for biomedical research (N = 418)
| Characteristic | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age in years | 0.299 | ||
| 18–29 ( | 45.8 (71) | 54.2 (84) | |
| 30–49 ( | 50.0 (74) | 50.0 (74) | |
| 50+ ( | 40.4 (46) | 59.6 (68) | |
| Biological sex | 0.040 | ||
| Male ( | 38.7 (55) | 61.3 (87) | |
| Female ( | 49.3 (136) | 50.7 (140) | |
| Gender | 0.038 | ||
| Male ( | 38.7 (55) | 61.3 (87) | |
| Female ( | 49.5 (135) | 50.5 (138) | |
| Race | 0.26 | ||
| White ( | 145 (44.5) | 181 (55.5) | |
| Racial minority ( | 45 (51.1) | 43 (48.9) | |
| Hispanic ethnicity | 0.917 | ||
| Yes ( | 44.8 (13) | 55.2 (16) | |
| No ( | 45.8 (176) | 54.2 (208) | |
| Education | 0.398 | ||
| High school /GED or less ( | 34.1 (15) | 65.9 (29) | |
| College/Associates ( | 48.3 (56) | 51.7 (60) | |
| College degree ( | 47.8 (65) | 52.2 (71) | |
| Graduate degree ( | 45.1 (55) | 54.9 (67) | |
| Residence status | 0.090 | ||
| Rural ( | 33.3 (14) | 66.7 (28) | |
| Urban ( | 47.1 (177) | 52.9 (199) | |
| Estimated median household income | 0.328 | ||
| Low ( | 50.7 (71) | 49.3 (69) | |
| Medium ( | 45.4 (64) | 54.6 (77) | |
| High ( | 41.8 (56) | 58.2 (78) | |
| Employment | 0.912 | ||
| Not employed/student/retired ( | 45.4 (54) | 54.6 (65) | |
| Employed full- or part-time ( | 46.0 (137) | 54.0 (161) | |
| Marital status | 0.885 | ||
| Single/divorced/widowed ( | 45.3 (87) | 54.7 (105) | |
| Married/partnered ( | 46.0 (104) | 54.0 (122) | |
| Interacted with social media past 6 months | 0.014 | ||
| Never or rarely ( | 28.8 (17) | 71.2 (42) | |
| Once a day ( | 44.6 (29) | 55.4 (36) | |
| Several times a day (289) | 44.6 (29) | 50.5 (146) | |
| Health literacy: need assistance to read materials from doctor/pharmacy | 0.034 | ||
| Never ( | 43.9 (126) | 56.1 (161) | |
| Rarely ( | 40.0 (28) | 60.0 (42) | |
| Sometimes/often/always ( | 60.7 (37) | 39.3 (24) | |
| Ever participated in a health research study | 0.086 | ||
| Yes ( | 51.9 (70) | 48.1 (65) | |
| No ( | 42.9 (121) | 57.1 (161) | |
Values are % (n). Percentages are based on non-missing data.
Willingness defined as endorsing “agreed” or “strongly agreed” to the question “I would be willing to be part of this Facebook group.”
χ-square test.
Multivariate logistic regression on the factors associated with willingness to participate
| Variable | Level | Odds ratio (95 % CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Female | 1.52 (0.99–2.33) | 0.053 |
| Health literacy | Never | Reference | 0.09 |
| Rarely | 0.86 (0.5–1.48) | 0.59 | |
| Sometimes/often/never | 1.81 (1.01–3.22) | 0.045 | |
| Social media use | Never or rarely | Reference | 0.048 |
| Once a day | 1.82 (0.86–3.88) | 0.12 | |
| Several hours a day | 2.17 (1.17–4.02) | 0.01 |
overall p-value.
Preferences for facebook group information, health topics, and ways to keep people engaged: Themes and illustrative quotes from content analysis
| Themes | Illustrative quotes |
|---|---|
| What types of information would you like to get through this Facebook group? ( | |
| 1. Participating in research and new research findings | “How to participate in health research studies” |
| 2. Health and wellness | “General health issues” |
| 3. Health care access and resources | “Actions to take if an illness arises” |
| 4. Credible and reliable resources for health information | “A qualified and expert voice to confirm or deny health related issues and new fads” |
| What health topics would you want to learn about as part of this Facebook group? ( | |
| 1. Health and wellness | “How to better take care of yourself and healthier eating habits” |
| 2. Chronic disease and prevention | “Cancer”, “Cancer treatment,” “Cancer research,” “Cancer topics” |
| 3. Mental health | “Mental health awareness or any other types of health related things that people don’t think about in their day to day lives, even though it can impact them in their day to day lives like having a healthy diet and getting enough exercise” |
| 4. Aging | “Alzheimer’s and other conditions of older people” |
| 5. Infectious and autoimmune disorders | “Things that are local or Midwest. Tick borne diseases, water-related” |
| What should we include in this Facebook group to keep people engaged and interested? ( | |
| 1. Attention grabbing content | “2 min run-downs. People won’t read full articles” |
| 2. Include new research findings | “Always updating with new topics. Keep it interesting and change it frequently to keep your audience” |
| 3. Interactive activities | “Current research links” |
| 4. Credible and reliable information | “Health related Trivia” |
Inter-rater agreement on themes for two independent raters (TB, MZ) was excellent (Cohen’s kappa coefficient = 0.86). Discrepancies in coding were discussed with a third author (CP) until agreement was reached.