| Literature DB >> 33971916 |
Shaun Treweek1, Katie Banister2, Peter Bower3, Seonaidh Cotton2, Declan Devane4, Heidi R Gardner2, Talia Isaacs5, Gary Nestor6, Adepeju Oshisanya7, Adwoa Parker8, Lynn Rochester9, Irene Soulsby10, Hywel Williams11, Miles D Witham12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ensuring that a trial is designed so that its participants reflect those who might benefit from the results, or be spared harms, is key to the potential benefits of the trial reaching all they should. This paper describes the process, facilitated by Trial Forge, that was used between July 2019 and October 2020 to develop the INCLUDE Ethnicity Framework, part of the wider INCLUDE initiative from the National Institute for Health Research to improve inclusion of under-served groups in clinical research studies.Entities:
Keywords: Ethnicity; External validity; Inclusion; Methodology; Randomised controlled trials
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33971916 PMCID: PMC8108025 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-021-05276-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1The final four key questions of the INCLUDE Ethnicity Framework
Fig. 2Overview of the seven development phases for the INCLUDE Ethnicity Framework and the groups contributing to each phase
The key points regarding the development of the INCLUDE Ethnicity Framework
Key points • The INCLUDE Ethnicity Framework is a tool that helps trial teams to think about how disease prevalence and severity, culture, faith, language, intervention and trial design features may affect trial participation of individuals from different ethnic groups. • A total of 40 people from stakeholder groups including patient and public partners, clinicians, funders, academics working with ethnic minority groups, trial managers and methodologists contributed to seven phases of Framework development. • The Framework comprises two parts: ‣ Part 1 has four key questions: 1. Who should my trial apply to? 2. Are the groups identified likely to respond in different ways? 3. Will my study intervention make it harder for some groups to engage? 4. Will the way I have designed the study make it harder for some groups to engage? ‣ Part 2 is a set of worksheets to help trial teams address these questions. • The Framework can be used for any stage of trial, for a healthcare intervention in any disease area. • The INCLUDE Ethnicity Framework was launched on October 1st 2020 and is available open access at |
The ethnic categories used by the UK census
| Broad category | Sub-categories |
|---|---|
| White | • English/Welsh/Scottish/Northern Irish/British • Irish • Romani or Irish Traveller • Any other White background |
| Mixed/multiple ethnic groups | • White and Black Caribbean • White and Black African • White and Asian • Any other mixed/multiple ethnic background |
| Asian/Asian British | • Indian • Pakistani • Bangladeshi • Chinese • Any other Asian background |
| Black/African/Caribbean/Black British | • African • Caribbean • Any other Black/African/Caribbean background |
| Other ethnic group | • Arab • Any other ethnic group |
Example text taken from the INCLUDE Ethnicity Frameworks for the By-Band-Sleeve, COVAC1, iQuaD, PRINCIPLE, RECOVERY and TriMaster trials. The fully completed Frameworks for all six trials are available at https://www.trialforge.org/trial-forge-centre/include/. As we note in the Frameworks themselves, the information may not be a proper reflection of the trial because we did not have in-depth knowledge of the field or access to all the trial materials