Alzheimer's & Dementia Outreach, Recruitment & Engagement Resources
Cultural Competence
Displaying 21 - 30 of 61 resources.
- To identify successful recruitment strategies, challenges, and best practices for researchers to engage African American communities in clinical studies, researchers reviewed studies conducted from 2001 to 2012 at an inner-city research center. They contacted the study coordinators to obtain data on recruitment and retention strategies, challenges, and dropout rates, and also interviewed 25 study coordinators on challenges and strategies. Successful recruitment and retention strategies included...
- This article reported on challenges and strategies related to recruitment of minority breast cancer survivors, particularly those with lymphedema, into the WISER Survivor Trial. The authors attributed successful recruitment to several factors, including diversity and cultural appropriateness of study staff; tracking the results of multiple recruitment methods and abandoning the ones with low yield; using active (e.g., mailings) and passive (e.g., printed materials and website) recruitment...
- Historically, African Americans have been disproportionately underrepresented in clinical trials. To address this gap, the authors analyzed recruitment data to identify the most effective strategies for enrolling older African Americans in clinical trials. Data used in these analyses were obtained from 3,266 potential volunteers, ages 50 or older, who completed a Mini-Mental State Examination as part of recruitment and screening for various clinical studies on Alzheimer's disease. The findings...
- The aim of this paper is to describe a person-centered and culturally sensitive approach to working with minority ethnic communities, involving carers, people living with dementia, members of the public and carer support workers, as used in the Caregiving HOPE study. The involvement of these experts was influenced by each individual's needs and desires, which changed over the course of the study. The approach to clinical research design and involvement had a significant impact on successful...
- This study examined the roles of race and culture in the attitudes and beliefs of African Americans about participating in clinical research. Five focus groups were conducted with 44 African-American men and women (aged 50 and over) in a western U.S. state. Participants were asked scripted questions regarding their knowledge and beliefs about Alzheimer's disease and their feelings about participating in clinical research. Themes that emerged were: experiences of unequal treatment and racism...
- Strengthening Translational Research in Diverse Enrollment (STRIDE) is a collaborative project focused on developing innovative approaches to enhancing informed consent procedures, with a goal of improving research literacy among underserved populations.
- 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...
- Researchers presented two innovative, testable methods for resolving the challenge of increasing older African Americans' participation in research studies. A total of 62 older African Americans were randomized to treatment and control conditions of a reminiscence intervention. Sensitivity to an African-American cultural form of respect for elders (recognition of worth and dignity) and intersections between the lived experience of the researcher and participants helped dispel this population's...
- This study used Community Partnered Participatory Research (CPPR) to address low participation of racial/ethnic minorities in medical research and the lack of trust between underrepresented communities and researchers. Residents of a South Los Angeles neighborhood were exposed to research recruitment strategies: referral by word-of-mouth, community agencies, direct marketing, and study participants. Study completion rates varied by recruitment method: referral by community agencies (88.7%)...
- 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...