Fletcher Susan, Clarke Janine, Sanatkar Samineh, Baldwin Peter, Gunn Jane, Zwar Nick, Campbell Lesley, Wilhelm Kay, Harris Mark, Lapsley Helen, Hadzi-Pavlovic Dusan, Proudfoot Judy
Department of General Practice, University of Melbourne, Carlton, Australia.
Black Dog Institute, Sydney, Australia.
J Med Internet Res. 2019 May 24;21(5):e12793. doi: 10.2196/12793.
E-mental health (eMH) interventions are now widely available and they have the potential to revolutionize the way that health care is delivered. As most health care is currently delivered by primary care, there is enormous potential for eMH interventions to support, or in some cases substitute, services currently delivered face to face in the community setting. However, randomized trials of eMH interventions have tended to recruit participants using online recruitment methods. Consequently, it is difficult to know whether participants who are recruited online differ from those who attend primary care.
This paper aimed to document the experience of recruiting to an eMH trial through primary care and compare the characteristics of participants recruited through this and other recruitment methods.
Recruitment to the SpringboarD randomized controlled trial was initially focused on general practices in 2 states of Australia. Over 15 months, we employed a comprehensive approach to engaging practice staff and supporting them to recruit patients, including face-to-face site visits, regular contact via telephone and trial newsletters, and development of a Web-based patient registration portal. Nevertheless, it became apparent that these efforts would not yield the required sample size, and we therefore supplemented recruitment through national online advertising and promoted the study through existing networks. Baseline characteristics of participants recruited to the trial through general practice, online, or other sources were compared using the analysis of variance and chi square tests.
Between November 2015 and October 2017, 780 people enrolled in SpringboarD, of whom 740 provided information on the recruitment source. Of these, only 24 were recruited through general practice, whereas 520 were recruited online and 196 through existing networks. Key barriers to general practice recruitment included perceived mismatch between trial design and diabetes population, prioritization of acute health issues, and disruptions posed by events at the practice and community level. Participants recruited through the 3 different approaches differed in age, gender, employment status, depressive symptoms, and diabetes distress, with online participants being distinguished from those recruited through general practice or other sources. However, most differences reached only a small effect size and are unlikely to be of clinical importance.
Time, labor, and cost-intensive efforts did not translate into successful recruitment through general practice in this instance, with barriers identified at several different levels. Online recruitment yielded more participants, who were broadly similar to those recruited via general practice.
电子心理健康(eMH)干预措施现已广泛可用,它们有可能彻底改变医疗保健的提供方式。由于目前大多数医疗保健是由初级保健提供的,因此eMH干预措施在支持或在某些情况下替代目前在社区环境中面对面提供的服务方面具有巨大潜力。然而,eMH干预措施的随机试验往往使用在线招募方法来招募参与者。因此,很难知道通过在线招募的参与者与那些到初级保健机构就诊的参与者是否存在差异。
本文旨在记录通过初级保健机构招募参与eMH试验的经历,并比较通过这种招募方式和其他招募方式招募的参与者的特征。
SpringboarD随机对照试验的招募工作最初集中在澳大利亚两个州的普通诊所。在15个月的时间里,我们采用了一种全面的方法来与诊所工作人员合作,并支持他们招募患者,包括面对面的实地考察、通过电话和试验通讯进行定期联系,以及开发一个基于网络的患者注册门户。然而,很明显这些努力无法达到所需的样本量,因此我们通过全国性在线广告补充招募,并通过现有网络推广该研究。使用方差分析和卡方检验比较了通过普通诊所、在线或其他来源招募到试验中的参与者的基线特征。
在2015年11月至2017年10月期间,780人参加了SpringboarD试验,其中740人提供了关于招募来源的信息。在这些人中,只有24人是通过普通诊所招募的,而520人是通过在线招募的,196人是通过现有网络招募的。普通诊所招募的主要障碍包括认为试验设计与糖尿病患者群体不匹配、优先处理急性健康问题,以及诊所和社区层面的事件造成的干扰。通过三种不同方式招募的参与者在年龄、性别、就业状况、抑郁症状和糖尿病困扰方面存在差异,在线参与者与通过普通诊所或其他来源招募的参与者有所不同。然而,大多数差异的效应量很小,不太可能具有临床重要性。
在这种情况下,耗时、费力且成本高昂的努力并没有转化为通过普通诊所成功招募,在几个不同层面都发现了障碍。在线招募产生了更多的参与者,他们与通过普通诊所招募的参与者大致相似。