Department of Behavioral, Social, Health Education Sciences, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
Emory College of Arts & Sciences, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Aug 13;16(8):e0256074. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0256074. eCollection 2021.
Asian-Americans are one of the most understudied racial/ethnic minority populations. To increase representation of Asian subgroups, researchers have traditionally relied on data collection at community venues and events. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has created serious challenges for in-person data collection. In this case study, we describe multi-modal strategies for online recruitment of U.S. Vietnamese parents, compare response rates and participant characteristics among strategies, and discuss lessons learned.
We recruited 408 participants from community-based organizations (CBOs) (n = 68), Facebook groups (n = 97), listservs (n = 4), personal network (n = 42), and snowball sampling (n = 197). Using chi-square tests and one-way analyses of variance, we compared participants recruited through different strategies regarding sociodemographic characteristics, acculturation-related characteristics, and mobile health usage.
The overall response rate was 71.8% (range: 51.5% for Vietnamese CBOs to 86.6% for Facebook groups). Significant differences exist for all sociodemographic and almost all acculturation-related characteristics among recruitment strategies. Notably, CBO-recruited participants were the oldest, had lived in the U.S. for the longest duration, and had the lowest Vietnamese language ability. We found some similarities between Facebook-recruited participants and those referred by Facebook-recruited participants. Mobile health usage was high and did not vary based on recruitment strategies. Challenges included encountering fraudulent responses (e.g., non-Vietnamese). Perceived benefits and trust appeared to facilitate recruitment.
Facebook and snowball sampling may be feasible strategies to recruit U.S. Vietnamese. Findings suggest the potential for mobile-based research implementation. Perceived benefits and trust could encourage participation and may be related to cultural ties. Attention should be paid to recruitment with CBOs and handling fraudulent responses.
亚裔美国人是研究最少的少数族裔群体之一。为了增加亚裔亚群体的代表性,研究人员传统上依赖于在社区场所和活动中进行数据收集。然而,COVID-19 大流行给实地数据收集带来了严重挑战。在本案例研究中,我们描述了美国越南裔父母在线招募的多模式策略,比较了不同策略之间的回复率和参与者特征,并讨论了经验教训。
我们从社区组织(CBO)(n = 68)、Facebook 群组(n = 97)、列表服务器(n = 4)、个人网络(n = 42)和滚雪球抽样(n = 197)招募了 408 名参与者。使用卡方检验和单向方差分析,我们比较了通过不同策略招募的参与者在社会人口统计学特征、文化适应相关特征和移动健康使用方面的差异。
总体回复率为 71.8%(范围:越南 CBO 为 51.5%,Facebook 群组为 86.6%)。不同招募策略之间的所有社会人口统计学和几乎所有文化适应相关特征都存在显著差异。值得注意的是,CBO 招募的参与者年龄最大,留在美国的时间最长,越南语能力最低。我们在 Facebook 招募的参与者和通过 Facebook 招募的参与者推荐的参与者之间发现了一些相似之处。移动健康使用率很高,且不受招募策略的影响。挑战包括遇到欺诈性回复(例如非越南裔)。被认为的益处和信任似乎促进了招募。
Facebook 和滚雪球抽样可能是招募美国越南裔的可行策略。研究结果表明了基于移动的研究实施的潜力。被认为的益处和信任可以鼓励参与,并且可能与文化联系有关。应该注意与 CBO 合作进行招募,并处理欺诈性回复。