Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3462782 | Contemporary Clinical Trials | 2010 | 6 Pages |
BackgroundResearch study participants with diverse characteristics produce the most generalizable outcomes, but recruiting heterogeneous samples is difficult.MethodsThis pilot study tests whether Asian women (N = 1079) with diverse language proficiencies, who were personally recruited to one study by a linguistically and culturally aligned recruiter, would enroll in another study with a single mailed invitation in English.ResultsThe 134 participants in the second study represented 17.2% of those 779 women who had completed both baseline and follow-up surveys in the original study, making this characteristic the best predictor of future study participation. Of the 303 women in the first study who said they would be willing to participate in future studies, 17% (51) participated in the second study. Of the 733 who said they would not be willing to participate in future studies, 11% (83) participated. However, given the larger size of this group, researchers may recruit a greater absolute number of participants from it. While this rate of participation was less than the 25% rate achieved in the first study, the second study's single, mailed English language invitation was likely a barrier to participation.ConclusionSecuring IRB-approval to invite prior study participants from traditionally underrepresented communities to a new study is a strategy investigators can use to increase the diversity of their samples. Further research is warranted to determine whether Asian women who have participated in one study might also become effective recruiters for future studies.