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Facilitating access to health research through a participatory research register: a feasibility study in outpatient clinics.

Authors :
Leach VA
McGeagh JD
Margelyte R
Redmond NM
Walther A
Redwood S
Martin RM
Donovan JL
Source :
Pilot and feasibility studies [Pilot Feasibility Stud] 2017 Jun 21; Vol. 4, pp. 6. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Jun 21 (Print Publication: 2018).
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background: A research register (Reach West) has been established to facilitate recruitment of people and patients to health-related research. We conducted a prospective feasibility study to investigate the practicality of recruiting through outpatient clinics.<br />Methods: Patients over 18 years of age attending dental, eye or oncology outpatient clinics in an acute hospital in the West of England were provided with the opportunity to participate in Reach West. In Phase I, recruitment packs were handed to clinic attendees who could place completed consent forms in secure drop-box or return them later on-line or by post. In Phase II, recruitment packs were posted directly to patients with consent forms to be returned by post or on-line. Response rates by age, sex, postcode (for level of deprivation), and clinic type were recorded for those agreeing to participate on paper or on-line.<br />Results: In Phase I, 2,314 of 4,500 (51.4%) of recruitment packs were handed out to clinic attendees, and 114 (5%) consented to join Reach West. In Phase II, 7,173 of 9000 packs were posted (79.7%), and 387 (5.4%) consented to participate. The overall consent rate was 6% (580), with the majority doing so on paper (87%) rather than on-line. The sample was balanced by sex, but mostly comprised people over 50 years located in less deprived postcodes. Non-staff costs for postal recruitment were lower than hand-outs in clinic (£6.84 compared with £8.05 per participant).<br />Conclusions: Recruiting participants to the Reach West register was feasible among those with oncology, dental or eye outpatient appointments by post or with packs given out in the clinic. Response rates were similar to those achieved for other registers. Recruitment of participants can be achieved through outpatient clinics but other strategies will also be required to attract large numbers of participants and more diverse populations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2055-5784
Volume :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Pilot and feasibility studies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28649418
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40814-017-0148-5