de Graaf Boris C, Gerritse Maria B E, Michiels Kim C J, Kluivers Kirsten B, van de Belt Tom H
Gelderse Vallei Hospital, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ede, the Netherlands.
Gelderse Vallei Hospital, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ede, the Netherlands; Radboud University Medical Center, Department of Gynecology, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol. 2024 Aug;299:253-257. doi: 10.1016/j.ejogrb.2024.06.028. Epub 2024 Jun 19.
This study explores the opportunities of social media advertisements as a recruitment strategy in women with stress urinary incontinence (SUI).
This feasibility study was part of a larger clinical trial on the effects of a patient decision aid for SUI treatment. We started a 61-day social media advertisement campaign to recruit women for the trial. The primary outcome of our study was enrolment pace. Secondary outcomes involved cost per participant, baseline demographic comparison and ad campaign performance metrics. Additionally, we interviewed recruited participants to identify the facilitators and barriers of our approach.
Ten participants were recruited, of whom 8 completed the full study protocol (2 questionnaires 6 months apart). The enrolment pace, 4.0 study participants per month, was faster compared to the average of 2.7 participants per month through conventional methods. The campaign reached 87 clicks on the advertisement per day and 1 % of these women showed interest in our study by contacting us. The overall conversion rate from click to full participation was 0.2 %. The costs per participant were €112. Besides higher age, the demographics of the social media recruited participants were comparable to the conventional inclusions. Qualitative analysis identified more user-oriented enrolment procedures and potential participant benefit as facilitators of social media recruitment.
This study shows that social media recruitment can be feasible in trials for women with SUI. It can accelerate recruitment of eligible participants. Optimising the enrolment procedure to better meet participants' needs and recruitment benefits may improve participation and cost-effectiveness. Trial registration ID 2017-3540.
本研究探讨社交媒体广告作为压力性尿失禁(SUI)女性招募策略的机会。
本可行性研究是一项关于SUI治疗患者决策辅助工具效果的大型临床试验的一部分。我们开展了为期61天的社交媒体广告活动以招募女性参与该试验。我们研究的主要结果是入组速度。次要结果包括每位参与者的成本、基线人口统计学比较和广告活动绩效指标。此外,我们对招募的参与者进行了访谈,以确定我们方法的促进因素和障碍。
招募了10名参与者,其中8名完成了完整的研究方案(相隔6个月的2份问卷)。入组速度为每月4.0名研究参与者,比通过传统方法平均每月2.7名参与者的速度更快。该活动每天广告的点击量达到87次,其中1%的女性通过联系我们表达了对我们研究的兴趣。从点击到完全参与的总体转化率为0.2%。每位参与者的成本为112欧元。除了年龄较大外,社交媒体招募参与者的人口统计学特征与传统纳入的参与者相当。定性分析确定了更以用户为导向的入组程序和潜在参与者利益是社交媒体招募的促进因素。
本研究表明,社交媒体招募在SUI女性试验中可能是可行的。它可以加速符合条件参与者的招募。优化入组程序以更好地满足参与者需求和招募效益可能会提高参与度和成本效益。试验注册号2017 - 3540。