Conover S, Berkman A, Gheith A, Jahiel R, Stanley D, Geller P A, Valencia E, Susser E
HIV Center for Clinical and Behavioral Studies, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, USA.
Bull N Y Acad Med. 1997 Summer;74(1):90-108.
Public health is paying increasing attention to elusive urban populations such as the homeless, street drug users, and illegal immigrants. Yet, valid data on the health of these populations remain scarce; longitudinal research, in particular, has been hampered by poor follow-up rates. This paper reports on the follow-up methods used in two randomized clinical trials among one such population, namely, homeless men with mental illness. Each of the two trials achieved virtually complete follow-up over 18 months. The authors describe the ethnographic approach to follow-up used in these trials and elaborate its application to four components of the follow-up: training interviewers, tracking participants, administering the research office, and conducting assessments. The ethnographic follow-up method is adaptable to other studies and other settings, and may provide a replicable model for achieving high follow-up rates in urban epidemiologic studies.
公共卫生领域正越来越关注诸如无家可归者、街头吸毒者和非法移民等难以捉摸的城市人群。然而,关于这些人群健康状况的有效数据仍然匮乏;特别是纵向研究,一直受到随访率低的阻碍。本文报告了在其中一类人群(即患有精神疾病的无家可归男性)中进行的两项随机临床试验所采用的随访方法。这两项试验中的每一项都在18个月内实现了几乎完全的随访。作者描述了这些试验中使用的人种志随访方法,并详细阐述了其在随访的四个组成部分中的应用:培训访谈员、追踪参与者、管理研究办公室以及进行评估。人种志随访方法适用于其他研究和其他环境,并且可能为在城市流行病学研究中实现高随访率提供一个可复制的模型。