Alzheimer's & Dementia Outreach, Recruitment & Engagement Resources
Barriers & Facilitators
Displaying 71 - 80 of 113 resources.
- High rates of attrition in longitudinal studies of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias may cause researchers to underestimate dementia prevalence and skew the characterization of the disease, comprising the generalizability of the results. To explore predictors of attrition, this study examined the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center (NACC) Uniform Data Set, a repository of observations of older adults spanning 11 years. Four samples were examined. The researchers found that worsening...
- Engaging patients in registry development can increase registries' long-term success and help retain patients who enroll in them. This study involved two semi-structured focus groups with 18 people with dementia and their family members to get their perspectives on registry participation experiences, barriers and facilitators to participation, and potential avenues for improvement of registry processes. The main themes identified included altruistic motives regarding registry participation and...
- Researchers in this study conducted 19 focus groups and nine interviews to identify recruitment barriers, motivators, and strategies to help increase access to and participation in clinical trials in rural and urban communities. More than 200 African-American and white men and women ages 21 and over participated in the focus groups. Researchers found that although similar barriers, motivators, and strategies were reported by urban and rural groups, perceptions regarding their importance varied...
- This article reviews the evidence that supports strategies to recruit and retain rural patients in behavioral intervention trials aimed at promoting self-management of cardiovascular disease and its risk factors. To overcome community-, research- and patient-related barriers (such as lack of transportation and remote distances), the investigators of the reviewed studies developed and implemented strategies to promote community engagement with research, improve the research process, increase...
- In this paper, the authors reviewed 44 articles published from January 2000 to December 2011 to identify the experienced or perceived barriers and facilitators to health research participation for major U.S. racial/ethnic minority populations. Shared barriers to participation included mistrust and lack of access to information. Despite different expressions of mistrust, all groups represented in these studies were willing to participate for altruistic reasons embedded in cultural and community...
- This review examined 26 studies, published between 1995 and 2012, that reported on recruitment of persons of different cultural and ethnic backgrounds. Authors extracted data on the type of recruitment strategies used and overall reported effectiveness of each strategy. They then developed a list of effective strategies in recruiting persons of diverse ethnic and cultural backgrounds. Strategies included both proactive recruitment (e.g., face-to-face meetings) and reactive recruitment (e.g...
- Directors of practice-based research networks (PBRNs) across the United States were surveyed to assess their use of community engagement approaches to recruit and retain participants from their local communities, especially racial/ethnic communities. Survey respondents indicated whether their research network planned for, implemented, and had capacity for activities that engage clinic and community partners in seven recommended strategies organized into study phases, called the cycle of trust...
- Mistrust of medical research is an important barrier hindering recruitment in African-American communities. In this study, researchers conducted in-depth, face-to-face interviews with leaders from four African-American churches about their experience with and barriers to hospice and palliative care research. Mistrust based on experience with previous researchers emerged as a common theme. Findings suggested that researchers who wish to conduct successful studies in African-American religious...
- To overcome the barriers of recruiting African Americans into health research studies, researchers tested an engagement strategy that used volunteer research registries and community review boards to link registrants to studies. The aims of this Community Research Outreach Workers' Network (CROWN) were to 1) create a community outreach-generated registry of African Americans interested in participating in health research and 2) develop a community research review board to advise investigators on...
- This editorial pertains to African American caregivers of people with dementia, specifically those with type 2 diabetes. The author reviews barriers to recruitment for this population and the experience of church-based recruiting of caregivers age 55 and older with diabetes who also care for a person with dementia. Important factors to success included a respected gatekeeper and relationship building. Barriers included the religious interpretation of dementia behaviors that produced stigma among...