Edwards Louisa, Rooshenas Leila, Isaacs Talia
University of Bristol, Graduate School of Education, Bristol, United Kingdom.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2016 Mar 11;5(1):e43. doi: 10.2196/resprot.5195.
Type 2 diabetes is common, on the rise, and disproportionately affects ethnic minority groups. Telehealth interventions may mitigate diabetes-related complications, but might under-recruit or even exclude ethnic minorities, in part because of English language requirements. The under-representation of minority patients in trials could threaten the generalizability of the findings, whereby the patients who might stand to benefit most from such interventions are not being included in their evaluation.
The aims of this systematic review are twofold: (1) to assess the reporting and prevalence of ethnic minorities in published telehealth trials for type 2 diabetes, including identifying trial features associated with successful patient recruitment; and (2) to determine the proportion of such trials that report English language proficiency as an inclusion/exclusion criterion, including how and why they do so.
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of adults with type 2 diabetes in Western, English-speaking countries that included telehealth interventions targeting diabetes as a primary condition, and those that did not specifically recruit minority groups will be included. Search strategies were devised for indexed and keyword terms capturing type 2 diabetes, telehealth/health technology, and RCTs in English language publications from 2000 to July 2015 in MEDLINE, PsycINFO, EMBASE, CINAHL, and CENTRAL. Reference lists of included studies will also be searched. Two reviewers will independently screen abstracts and full-text articles against inclusion criteria, mediated by a third reviewer if consensus cannot be reached. Data extracted from included studies will be checked by a second reviewer and will be summarized using narrative synthesis.
This research is in progress, with findings expected by Spring 2016.
This review will address research reporting and recruitment practices of ethnic minorities in telehealth RCTs for type 2 diabetes. Prevalence estimates will elucidate generalizability of existing research, with implications for researchers, health professionals, and policy makers. Identifying trial or intervention features that appear to facilitate ethnic minority recruitment, as well as language barriers that impede it might suggest ways to improve recruitment in future trials.
PROSPERO International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews: CRD42015024899; http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/display_record.asp?ID=CRD42015024899 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6fUMqbJ0f).
2型糖尿病很常见,且呈上升趋势,对少数族裔群体的影响尤为严重。远程医疗干预可能会减轻糖尿病相关并发症,但可能会少招募甚至排除少数族裔,部分原因是存在英语语言要求。少数族裔患者在试验中的代表性不足可能会威胁到研究结果的普遍性,即那些可能从此类干预中获益最多的患者未被纳入评估。
本系统评价有两个目的:(1)评估已发表的2型糖尿病远程医疗试验中少数族裔的报告情况和患病率,包括确定与成功招募患者相关的试验特征;(2)确定将英语语言能力作为纳入/排除标准的此类试验的比例,包括其方式和原因。
纳入在西方英语国家开展的针对2型糖尿病成人的随机对照试验(RCT),这些试验包括将糖尿病作为主要病症的远程医疗干预,以及那些未专门招募少数族裔群体的试验。针对2000年至2015年7月期间MEDLINE、PsycINFO、EMBASE、CINAHL和CENTRAL数据库中英语出版物中捕获2型糖尿病、远程医疗/健康技术和RCT的索引词和关键词制定检索策略。还将检索纳入研究的参考文献列表。两名评审员将根据纳入标准独立筛选摘要和全文文章,如果无法达成共识,则由第三名评审员进行调解。从纳入研究中提取的数据将由第二名评审员进行核对,并使用叙述性综合进行总结。
本研究正在进行中,预计2016年春季得出结果。
本综述将探讨2型糖尿病远程医疗RCT中少数族裔的研究报告和招募实践。患病率估计将阐明现有研究的普遍性,对研究人员、卫生专业人员和政策制定者具有启示意义。确定似乎有助于少数族裔招募的试验或干预特征,以及阻碍招募的语言障碍,可能会为未来试验中改善招募工作提供思路。
PROSPERO国际系统评价前瞻性注册库:CRD42015024899;http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/display_record.asp?ID=CRD42015024899(由WebCite存档于http://www.webcitation.org/6fUMqbJ0f)