4.2 Article

Optimizing Recruitment of Black Adolescents into Behavioral Research: A Multi-Center Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 46, Issue 6, Pages 611-620

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jpepsy/jsab008

Keywords

adolescents; diabetes; race/ethnicity; research design and methodology

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Disease [R01DK110075-01A1]

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Recruiting young Black adolescents with type 1 diabetes and their primary caregivers into clinical trials requires persistent efforts, and social determinants of health may play a role in recruitment difficulties. There were significant differences in family income between expedited recruitment (ER) and prolonged recruitment (PR) families, but no other significant between-group differences were found.
Objectives Adolescents of color are underrepresented in behavioral health research. Study aims were to quantify the amount and types of outreach effort needed to recruit young Black adolescents with type 1 diabetes and their primary caregiver into a clinical trial evaluating a parenting intervention and to determine if degree of recruitment difficulty was related to demographic, diabetes-related, or family characteristics. Methods Data were drawn from a multi-center clinical trial. Participants (N = 155) were recruited from seven pediatric diabetes clinics. Contact log data were used to quantify both number/type of contacts prior to study enrollment as well as length of time to enrollment. Families were coded as having expedited recruitment (ER) or prolonged recruitment (PR). Baseline study data were used to compare ER and PR families on sociodemographic factors, adolescent diabetes management and health status and family characteristics such as household organization and family conflict. Results Mean length of time to recruit was 6.6 months and mean number of recruitment contacts was 10.3. Thirty-nine percent of the sample were characterized as PR. These families required even higher levels of effort (mean of 9.9 months to recruit and 15.4 contacts). There were no significant between-group differences on any baseline variable for ER and PR families, with the exception of family income. Conclusions Researchers need to make persistent efforts in order to successfully enroll adolescents of color and their caregivers into clinical trials. Social determinants of health such as family resources may differentiate families with prolonged recruitment within such samples.

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