Alzheimer's & Dementia Outreach, Recruitment & Engagement Resources
Cultural Competence
Displaying 31 - 40 of 61 resources.
- 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...
- The researchers tested whether targeted recruitment letters acknowledging diabetes health disparities and health risks specific to recipients' racial/ethnic group improved two metrics of trial participation: willingness to be screened and enrollment. This experiment was efficiently nested within a randomized clinical trial examining a preventive lifestyle intervention among pregnant women at high risk for diabetes. Participants received either a targeted recruitment letter with health risk...
- 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...
- A clinical trial evaluated the effectiveness of a church-based educational intervention aimed at improving African Americans' participation in clinical trials. A total of 221 subjects age 50 and older were recruited from six predominantly African American churches in the Atlanta area. Some subjects attended three educational sessions, while others (the controls) completed questionnaires. Subjects' intention to join a clinical trial was measured at baseline and after 3 and 6 months. Researchers...
- The engagement of lay stakeholders, such as community advisory boards (CABs), has the potential to increase recruitment and retention of underrepresented groups by providing a structure for gathering feedback on research plans and materials. However, many CABs recruit prominent stakeholders who are connected to or comfortable with research and academia and thus may not accurately represent all underrepresented populations. Researchers developed a partnership between a university nursing school...
- The sponsors of the PEARLS (Program to Encourage Active, Rewarding Lives) study, a home-based depression-care management program for elders, partnered with three social service organizations in the Seattle area to identify hard-to-reach populations, barriers to reaching them, and strategies for improving recruitment and retention. Based on semistructured interviews with study staff and former PEARLS participants, several themes emerged, including trust, cultural appropriateness, meet them where...
- The authors describe strategies used to recruit older adults to a clinical trial of a behavioral intervention to improve adherence to taking antihypertensive medication. Four themes are explored: accessing an appropriate population, communication and trust-building, providing comfort and security, and expressing gratitude. Recruitment success was linked to cultivating relationships with community-based organizations, face-to-face contact with potential study participants, and providing a service...
- Recruiting minorities can be challenging for clinical researchers. This study examined the recruitment strategies used by "comprehensive" versus "traditional" researchers. Results of an online survey, conducted in 2010, found that "comprehensive" researchers used more, and more diverse and active, recruitment strategies, while "traditional" researchers used fewer and more passive strategies. The authors found that comprehensive researchers were more likely than traditional ones to 1) report...
- TabCAT is a software platform developed at the University of California, San Francisco that provides tablet-based neuropsychological tests translated into 10 languages. Tools available include cognitive tests of executive function, memory, visuospatial skills, and socioemotional functions, as well as symptom questionnaires.
- This University of Maryland Center for Health Equity website is designed to help build trust between communities and health researchers. It includes fact sheets, articles, reports, and videos.