TY - JOUR
T1 - Evidence-Based Recruitment Strategies for Clinical Research
T2 - Study Personnel's and Research Participants' Perceptions About Successful Methods of Outreach for a U.S. Autism-Research Cohort
AU - SPARK Consortium
AU - Goin-Kochel, Robin P.
AU - Lozano, Ivana
AU - Duhon, Gabrielle
AU - Marzano, Gabriela
AU - Daniels, Amy
AU - Kiely Law, J.
AU - Diehl, Katharine
AU - Snyder, Lee Anne Green
AU - Feliciano, Pamela
AU - Chung, Wendy K.
AU - Aarrestad, Alexandria
AU - Abbeduto, Leonard
AU - Aberbach, Gabriella
AU - Aberle, Shelley
AU - Acampado, John
AU - Ace, Andrea J.
AU - Adegbite, Adediwura
AU - Adeniji, Debbie
AU - Aguilar, Maria
AU - Ahlers, Kaitlyn
AU - Albright, Charles
AU - Alessandri, Michael
AU - Algaze, Zach
AU - Alkazi, Jasem
AU - Amador, Raquel
AU - Amaral, David
AU - Amatya, Alpha
AU - Amon, Logan
AU - Amundsen, Leonor
AU - Andrus, Alicia
AU - Anglo, Claudine
AU - Annett, Robert
AU - Arar, Adam
AU - Arnold, Jonathan
AU - Arriaga, Ivette
AU - Arzate, Eduardo
AU - Ashley, Raven
AU - Aslamy, Leilemah
AU - Astrovskaya, Irina
AU - Baalman, Kelli
AU - Baer, Melissa
AU - Bahi, Ethan
AU - Bailey, Joshua
AU - Baldlock, Zachary
AU - Ball, Elissa
AU - Banks, Grabrielle
AU - Baraghoshi, Gabriele
AU - Bardett, Nicole
AU - Barns, Sarah
AU - Soorya, Latha
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Introduction: Under enrollment of participants in clinical research is costly and delays study completion to impact public health. Given that research personnel make decisions about which strategies to pursue and participants are the recipients of these efforts, we surveyed research staff (n = 52) and participants (n = 4,144) affiliated with SPARK (Simons Foundation Powering Autism for Knowledge)-the largest study of autism in the U.S.-to understand their perceptions of effective recruitment strategies. Methods: In Study 1, research personnel were asked to report recruitment strategies that they tried for SPARK and to indicate which ones they would and would not repeat/recommend. In Study 2, SPARK participants were asked to indicate all the ways they heard about the study prior to enrollment and which one was most influential in their decisions to enroll. Results: Staff rated speaking with a SPARK study-team member (36.5%), speaking with a medical provider (19.2%), word of mouth (11.5%), and a live TV news story (11.5%) as the most successful strategies. Participants most often heard about SPARK via social media (47.0%), speaking with a medical provider (23.1%), and an online search (20.1%). Research personnel's and participants' views on effective recruitment strategies often differed, with the exception of speaking with a medical provider. Conclusion: Results suggest that a combination of strategies is likely to be most effective in reaching diverse audiences. Findings have implications for the selection of strategies that meet a study's specific needs, as well as recruitment-strategy "combinations" that may enhance the influence of outreach efforts.
AB - Introduction: Under enrollment of participants in clinical research is costly and delays study completion to impact public health. Given that research personnel make decisions about which strategies to pursue and participants are the recipients of these efforts, we surveyed research staff (n = 52) and participants (n = 4,144) affiliated with SPARK (Simons Foundation Powering Autism for Knowledge)-the largest study of autism in the U.S.-to understand their perceptions of effective recruitment strategies. Methods: In Study 1, research personnel were asked to report recruitment strategies that they tried for SPARK and to indicate which ones they would and would not repeat/recommend. In Study 2, SPARK participants were asked to indicate all the ways they heard about the study prior to enrollment and which one was most influential in their decisions to enroll. Results: Staff rated speaking with a SPARK study-team member (36.5%), speaking with a medical provider (19.2%), word of mouth (11.5%), and a live TV news story (11.5%) as the most successful strategies. Participants most often heard about SPARK via social media (47.0%), speaking with a medical provider (23.1%), and an online search (20.1%). Research personnel's and participants' views on effective recruitment strategies often differed, with the exception of speaking with a medical provider. Conclusion: Results suggest that a combination of strategies is likely to be most effective in reaching diverse audiences. Findings have implications for the selection of strategies that meet a study's specific needs, as well as recruitment-strategy "combinations" that may enhance the influence of outreach efforts.
KW - autism
KW - parent/caregiver
KW - participant enrollment
KW - research recruitment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85189988787&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/cts.2024.512
DO - 10.1017/cts.2024.512
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85189988787
SN - 2059-8661
JO - Journal of Clinical and Translational Science
JF - Journal of Clinical and Translational Science
ER -