What can we learn from trial decliners about improving recruitment? Qualitative study
What can we learn from trial decliners about improving recruitment? Qualitative study
Background: Trials increasingly experience problems in recruiting participants. Understanding the causes of poor recruitment is critical to developing solutions. We interviewed people who had declined a trial of an innovative psychological therapy for depression (REFRAMED), about their response to the trial invitation in order to understand their decision and identify ways to improve recruitment.
Methods: Of 214 people who declined the trial, 35 (16%) gave permission to be contacted about a qualitative study to explore their decision. Analysis of transcripts of semi-structured interviews was informed by grounded theory.
Results: We interviewed 20 informants: 14 women and six men, aged 18 to 77 years. Many interviewees had prior experience of research participation and positive views of the trial. Interviewees’ decision making resembled a four-stage sequential process; in each stage they either decided not to participate in the trial or progressed to the next stage. In Stage 1, interviewees assessed the invitation in the context of their experiences and attitudes; we term those who opted out at this stage ‘prior decliners’ as they had an established position of declining trials. In Stage 2, interviewees assessed their own eligibility; those who judged themselves ineligible and opted out at this stage are termed ‘self-excluders’. In Stage 3, interviewees assessed their need for the trial therapy and potential to benefit; we term those who decided they did not need the trial therapy and opted out at this stage ‘treatment decliners’. In Stage 4, interviewees deliberated the benefits and costs of trial participation; those who opted out after judging that disadvantages outweighed advantages are termed ‘trial decliners’. Across all stages, most individuals declined because they judged themselves ineligible or not in need of the trial therapy. While ‘prior decliners’ are unlikely to respond to any trial recruitment initiative, the factors leading others to decline are amenable to amelioration as they do not arise from a rejection of trials or an established principle.
Conclusions: To improve recruitment in similar trials, the most successful interventions are likely to address patients’ assessments of their eligibility and their potential to benefit from the trial treatment, rather than reducing trial burden.
Hughes-Morley, Adwoa
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Young, Bridget
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Hempel, Roelie
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Russell, Ian T.
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Waheed, Waquas
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Bower, Peter
ec553157-a170-4219-8b55-2df813846e44
12 October 2016
Hughes-Morley, Adwoa
c5601cd0-752c-4542-8d0d-ed0b2e58707b
Young, Bridget
f950d6c8-951a-461a-bf69-5ed67bba2a73
Hempel, Roelie
2dfa9856-74dd-49b5-86e6-f78eace6727f
Russell, Ian T.
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Waheed, Waquas
93fa8395-c3bf-4db7-b071-ca9efc8c4fbc
Bower, Peter
ec553157-a170-4219-8b55-2df813846e44
Hughes-Morley, Adwoa, Young, Bridget, Hempel, Roelie, Russell, Ian T., Waheed, Waquas and Bower, Peter
(2016)
What can we learn from trial decliners about improving recruitment? Qualitative study.
Trials, 17 (1), [494].
(doi:10.1186/s13063-016-1626-4).
Abstract
Background: Trials increasingly experience problems in recruiting participants. Understanding the causes of poor recruitment is critical to developing solutions. We interviewed people who had declined a trial of an innovative psychological therapy for depression (REFRAMED), about their response to the trial invitation in order to understand their decision and identify ways to improve recruitment.
Methods: Of 214 people who declined the trial, 35 (16%) gave permission to be contacted about a qualitative study to explore their decision. Analysis of transcripts of semi-structured interviews was informed by grounded theory.
Results: We interviewed 20 informants: 14 women and six men, aged 18 to 77 years. Many interviewees had prior experience of research participation and positive views of the trial. Interviewees’ decision making resembled a four-stage sequential process; in each stage they either decided not to participate in the trial or progressed to the next stage. In Stage 1, interviewees assessed the invitation in the context of their experiences and attitudes; we term those who opted out at this stage ‘prior decliners’ as they had an established position of declining trials. In Stage 2, interviewees assessed their own eligibility; those who judged themselves ineligible and opted out at this stage are termed ‘self-excluders’. In Stage 3, interviewees assessed their need for the trial therapy and potential to benefit; we term those who decided they did not need the trial therapy and opted out at this stage ‘treatment decliners’. In Stage 4, interviewees deliberated the benefits and costs of trial participation; those who opted out after judging that disadvantages outweighed advantages are termed ‘trial decliners’. Across all stages, most individuals declined because they judged themselves ineligible or not in need of the trial therapy. While ‘prior decliners’ are unlikely to respond to any trial recruitment initiative, the factors leading others to decline are amenable to amelioration as they do not arise from a rejection of trials or an established principle.
Conclusions: To improve recruitment in similar trials, the most successful interventions are likely to address patients’ assessments of their eligibility and their potential to benefit from the trial treatment, rather than reducing trial burden.
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Interviews with decliners manuscript_ Trials revised version 12.09.2016 all changed accepted.docx
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 September 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 October 2016
Published date: 12 October 2016
Organisations:
Psychology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 400902
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/400902
ISSN: 1745-6215
PURE UUID: b6f5af9f-32c0-4561-8832-f150e19994b4
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Date deposited: 29 Sep 2016 11:04
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:55
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Contributors
Author:
Adwoa Hughes-Morley
Author:
Bridget Young
Author:
Roelie Hempel
Author:
Ian T. Russell
Author:
Waquas Waheed
Author:
Peter Bower
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