College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Northwest, 1125 N. College Ave, Fayetteville, AR, 72703, United States of America.
Office of Community Health and Research, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Northwest, 1125 N. College Ave, Fayetteville, AR, 72703, United States of America.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2019 Mar 4;17(1):25. doi: 10.1186/s12961-019-0422-5.
Although research participants are generally interested in receiving results from studies in which they participate, health researchers rarely communicate study findings to participants. The present study was designed to provide opportunity for a broad group of health researchers to describe their experiences and concerns related to sharing results (i.e. aggregate study findings) with research participants.
We used a mixed-methods concurrent triangulation design, relying on an online survey to capture health researchers' experiences, perceptions and barriers related to sharing study results with participants. Respondents were health researchers who conduct research that includes the consent of human subjects and hold a current appointment at an accredited academic medical institution within the United States. For quantitative data, the analytic strategy focused on item-level descriptive analyses. For the qualitative data, analyses focused on a priori themes and emergent subthemes.
Respondents were 414 researchers from 44 academic medical institutions; 64.5% reported that results should always be shared with participants, yet 60.8% of respondents could identify studies in which they had a leadership role where results were not shared. Emergent subthemes from researchers' reasons why results should be shared included participant ownership of findings and benefits of results sharing to science. Reasons for not sharing included concerns related to participants' health literacy and participants' lack of desire for results. Across all respondents who described barriers to results sharing, the majority described logistical barriers.
Study findings contribute to the literature by documenting researchers' perspectives and experiences about sharing results with research participants, which can inform efforts to improve results sharing. Most respondents indicated that health research results should always be shared with participants, although the extent to which many respondents described barriers to results sharing as well as reported reasons not to share results suggests difficulties with a one-size-fits-all approach to improving results sharing.
尽管研究参与者通常对收到他们参与的研究结果感兴趣,但健康研究人员很少向参与者传达研究发现。本研究旨在为广泛的健康研究人员提供机会,描述他们与参与者分享结果(即汇总研究结果)的经验和关注点。
我们使用混合方法同时三角测量设计,依靠在线调查来捕捉健康研究人员与参与者分享研究结果的经验、看法和障碍。受访者是在美国认可的学术医疗机构中进行包含人类受试者同意的研究的健康研究人员。对于定量数据,分析策略侧重于项目级别的描述性分析。对于定性数据,分析侧重于预设主题和新兴子主题。
受访者来自 44 家学术医疗机构的 414 名研究人员;64.5%的人报告说结果应该始终与参与者分享,但 60.8%的受访者能够识别出他们在其中具有领导作用但未分享结果的研究。研究人员分享结果的原因的新兴子主题包括参与者对研究结果的所有权和结果分享对科学的好处。不分享的原因包括与参与者健康素养相关的问题和参与者对结果缺乏兴趣。在所有描述分享结果障碍的受访者中,大多数人描述了后勤障碍。
研究结果通过记录研究人员关于与研究参与者分享结果的观点和经验,为文献做出了贡献,这可以为改善结果分享的努力提供信息。大多数受访者表示,健康研究结果应始终与参与者分享,尽管许多受访者描述了分享结果的障碍,并报告了不分享结果的原因,这表明对于改善结果分享,一刀切的方法存在困难。