Bender Jacqueline L, Akinnibosun Rukayyah, Puri Natasha, D'Agostino Norma, Drake Emily K, Tsimicalis Argerie, Howard A Fuchsia, Garland Sheila N, Chalifour Karine, Gupta Abha A
Cancer Rehabilitation and Survivorship, Department of Supportive Care, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Digit Health. 2023 Oct 25;9:20552076231205278. doi: 10.1177/20552076231205278. eCollection 2023 Jan-Dec.
Adolescents and young adults diagnosed with cancer (AYAs) are under-represented in research. The Internet and social media could increase the reach of recruitment efforts but may impact sample characteristics. This study evaluated the characteristics of AYAs recruited in-person at an urban hospital versus the Internet in terms of their sociodemographic and medical characteristics, and psychosocial wellbeing, and offers recommendation for increasing the inclusivity and representativeness of research samples.
Participant data from a cross-sectional survey of AYAs in Canada were evaluated. In-person hospital recruitment used a registry to identify patients attending ambulatory clinics. Internet recruitment included notices on hospital, team members', and community partners' social media channels, and email newsletters. Independent sample -tests and Chi-squared tests were used to identify differences in participant sociodemographic, medical, and psychosocial characteristics based on recruitment source.
Of 436 participants, 217 (49.8%) were recruited in-person and 219 (50.2%) online. Online participants were more likely: to be white ( < .001), women ( < .001), and Canadian-born ( < .001); to speak English at home ( < .001), live alone ( = .001) and live in rural settings ( = .014); and to be farther from diagnosis ( = .023), diagnosed with breast cancer ( < .001), and cancer free ( < .001) compared to the hospital sample. Online participants also reported higher anxiety, depression, and loneliness ( < .001), and lower social support (p < .001), self-efficacy for coping with cancer ( < .001), and life satisfaction ( = .006).
Online recruitment yielded a more geographically diverse but less sociodemographically diverse sample of AYAs who were farther from diagnosis and had poorer psychosocial wellbeing than in-person recruitment at an urban hospital. Future research efforts should consider partnering with under-represented communities and using targeted and stratified online and in-person recruitment strategies to achieve an inclusive and representative sample of AYAs.
被诊断患有癌症的青少年和青年成年人(AYAs)在研究中的代表性不足。互联网和社交媒体可以扩大招募工作的范围,但可能会影响样本特征。本研究评估了在城市医院通过线下招募与通过互联网招募的AYAs在社会人口统计学和医学特征、心理社会幸福感方面的特点,并为提高研究样本的包容性和代表性提供建议。
对加拿大AYAs横断面调查的参与者数据进行评估。线下医院招募使用登记册来识别前往门诊诊所的患者。互联网招募包括在医院、团队成员和社区合作伙伴的社交媒体渠道上发布通知以及电子邮件通讯。使用独立样本t检验和卡方检验来确定基于招募来源的参与者社会人口统计学、医学和心理社会特征的差异。
在436名参与者中,217名(49.8%)是线下招募的,219名(50.2%)是通过线上招募的。线上参与者更有可能:是白人(p <.001)、女性(p <.001)且出生在加拿大(p <.001);在家说英语(p <.001)、独自生活(p =.001)且生活在农村地区(p =.014);与医院样本相比,距离确诊时间更长(p =.023)、被诊断患有乳腺癌(p <.001)且无癌症(p <.001)。线上参与者还报告有更高的焦虑、抑郁和孤独感(p <.001),以及更低的社会支持(p <.001)、应对癌症的自我效能感(p <.001)和生活满意度(p =.006)。
与在城市医院进行线下招募相比,互联网招募产生的AYAs样本在地理上更加多样化,但在社会人口统计学上的多样性较低,且距离确诊时间更长,心理社会幸福感更差。未来的研究工作应考虑与代表性不足的社区合作,并使用有针对性的分层线上和线下招募策略,以获得一个具有包容性和代表性的AYAs样本。