1. Communicating the results of research: how do participants of a cardiac rehabilitation RCT prefer to be informed?
- Author
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Dalal, Hasnain, Wingham, Jennifer, Pritchard, Colin, Northey, Sharon, Evans, Philip, Taylor, Rod S., and Campbell, John
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EVALUATION of clinical trials , *AGE distribution , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CHI-squared test , *CLINICAL trials , *COMMUNICATION , *COMPUTER software , *FISHER exact test , *CARDIAC rehabilitation , *LONGITUDINAL method , *EVALUATION of medical care , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *PATIENT satisfaction , *PATIENTS , *POSTAL service , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *SEX distribution , *STATISTICS , *T-test (Statistics) , *EMAIL , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DATA analysis , *HUMAN research subjects - Abstract
Objective To determine the preferred means by which participants in a study of cardiac rehabilitation wish to be informed of the study’s results. Design Postal questionnaire survey of participants in a randomized controlled trial. Setting Cornwall, southwest England. Participants Patients recruited to the Cornwall Heart Attack Rehabilitation Management Study (CHARMS). Method Participants recruited to CHARMS who were alive 3 years and 9 months after the trial was completed were contacted by letter and invited to return a reply slip with four short questions indicating how they would prefer to be informed about the published results of the study. Results In March 2008, 191/230 participants originally recruited to CHARMS were still alive. General practitioners deemed 166/191 (88%) survivors medically appropriate to be contacted through a postal survey, and 154/166 (93%) participants responded to the invitation to participate in the follow-up survey. 86% (143/166) of participants indicated that they wished to be informed about the results: 115 (80%) of these elected to receive information by letter and 25 (18%) of these preferred to attend a meeting. Men older than 65 years predominated in this latter group. Women respondents preferred to receive the study results by letter; none preferred communication by email or the web. Conclusion Survivors of acute myocardial infarction who participated in a RCT of cardiac rehabilitation wanted to receive a summary of the aggregate study results. Participants had preferences regarding how they would wish to be informed about the results of the study. Most participants preferred to be informed by letter or email, but some preferred the interaction of a group or a meeting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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