wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/b9d1dac6de0c8a3102ccf43501a8396d-cui-zhaohui-and-tru/info.yaml

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abstract: 'BackgroundThe recruitment of participants into community-based
randomized controlled trials studying childhood obesity is often
challenging, especially from low-income racial/ethnical minorities and
when long-term participant commitments are required. This paper
describes strategies used to recruit and enroll predominately low-income
racial/ethnic minority parents and children into the Childhood Obesity
Prevention and Treatment Research (COPTR) consortium.MethodsThe COPTR
consortium has run four independent 3-year, multi-level (individual,
family, school, clinic, and community) community-based randomized
controlled trials. Two were prevention trials in preschool children and
the other two were treatment trials in pre-adolescents and adolescent
youth. All trials reported monthly participant recruitment numbers using
a standardized method over the projected 18-24months of recruitment.
After randomization of participants was completed, recruitment staff and
investigators from each trial retrospectively completed a survey of
recruitment strategies and their perceived top three recruitment
strategies and barriers.ResultsRecruitment was completed in 15-21months
across trials, enrolling a total of 1745 parent-child dyads- out of 6314
screened. The number of children screened per randomized child was 4.6
and 3.5 in the two prevention trials, and 3.1 and 2.5 in the two
treatment trials. Recruitment strategies reported included: (1) careful
planning, (2) working with trusting community partners, (3) hiring
recruitment staff who were culturally sensitive, personality
appropriate, and willing to work flexible hours, (4) contacting
potential participants actively and repeatedly, (5) recruiting at times
and locations convenient for participants, (6) providing incentives to
participants to complete baseline measures, (7) using a tracking
database, (8) evaluating whether participants understand the activities
and expectations of the study, and (9) assessing participants''
motivation for participating. Working with community partners, hiring
culturally sensitive staff, and contacting potential participants
repeatedly were cited by two trials among their top three strategies.
The requirement of a 3-year commitment to the trial was cited by two
trials to be among the top three recruitment
barriers.ConclusionsComprehensive strategies that include community
partnership support, culturally sensitive recruitment staff, and
repeated contacts with potential participants can result in successful
recruitment of low-income racial/ethnic minority families into obesity
prevention and treatment trials.Trial registrationNET-Works trial:
ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01606891. Registered on 28 May 2012.GROW trial:
ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01316653. Registered on 16 March 2011.GOALS
trial: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01642836. Registered on 17 July
2012.IMPACT trial: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01514279. Registered on 23
January 2012.'
affiliation: 'Cui, ZH (Corresponding Author), Univ N Carolina, Gillings Sch Global
Publ Hlth, Dept Nutr, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA.
Cui, Zhaohui; Truesdale, Kimberly P.; Ward, Dianne S., Univ N Carolina, Gillings
Sch Global Publ Hlth, Dept Nutr, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA.
Robinson, Thomas N.; Matheson, Donna, Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Stanford
Solut Sci Lab, Stanford, CA USA.
Pemberton, Victoria; Pratt, Charlotte A., NHLBI, NIH, Bldg 10, Bethesda, MD 20892
USA.
French, Simone A.; Hotop, Anne M., Univ Minnesota, Sch Publ Hlth, Div Epidemiol
\& Community Hlth, Minneapolis, MN USA.
Escarfuller, Juan; Po''e, Eli, Vanderbilt Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Pediat, Nashville,
TN 37232 USA.
Casey, Terri L., Rainbow Babies \& Childrens Hosp, 2101 Adelbert Rd, Cleveland,
OH 44106 USA.
Lotas, Lynn J.; Andrisin, Sharon, Case Western Reserve Univ, Frances Payne Bolton
Sch Nursing, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA.'
article-number: '296'
author: Cui, Zhaohui and Truesdale, Kimberly P. and Robinson, Thomas N. and Pemberton,
Victoria and French, Simone A. and Escarfuller, Juan and Casey, Terri L. and Hotop,
Anne M. and Matheson, Donna and Pratt, Charlotte A. and Lotas, Lynn J. and Po'e,
Eli and Andrisin, Sharon and Ward, Dianne S.
author-email: cuizhaohui2008@gmail.com
author_list:
- family: Cui
given: Zhaohui
- family: Truesdale
given: Kimberly P.
- family: Robinson
given: Thomas N.
- family: Pemberton
given: Victoria
- family: French
given: Simone A.
- family: Escarfuller
given: Juan
- family: Casey
given: Terri L.
- family: Hotop
given: Anne M.
- family: Matheson
given: Donna
- family: Pratt
given: Charlotte A.
- family: Lotas
given: Lynn J.
- family: Po'e
given: Eli
- family: Andrisin
given: Sharon
- family: Ward
given: Dianne S.
da: '2023-09-28'
doi: 10.1186/s13063-019-3418-0
eissn: 1745-6215
files: []
journal: TRIALS
keywords: 'Recruitment; Strategy; Barrier; Intervention; Minority; Hispanic;
African American; Low-income; Children; Parent-child dyads'
keywords-plus: 'RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; CLINICAL-TRIALS; FAMILY; ADOLESCENTS;
OVERWEIGHT; RETENTION; MINORITY; WEIGHT; IMPACT; CARE'
language: English
month: MAY 28
number-of-cited-references: '30'
orcid-numbers: French, Simone/0000-0003-3413-5985
papis_id: a4a320f0dc670ffe6469440caabd8c29
ref: Cui2019recruitmentstrategie
times-cited: '15'
title: 'Recruitment strategies for predominantly low-income, multi-racial/ethnic children
and parents to 3-year community-based intervention trials: Childhood Obesity Prevention
and Treatment Research (COPTR) Consortium'
type: article
unique-id: WOS:000469521100002
usage-count-last-180-days: '0'
usage-count-since-2013: '4'
volume: '20'
web-of-science-categories: Medicine, Research \& Experimental
year: '2019'