Recruitment of participants for dementia research: interprofessional perspectives from primary care-based memory clinics
To understand clinician attitudes and the barriers that impede research recruitment from specialized primary care-based memory clinics. Clinicians completed a survey on attitudes and barriers to research recruitment from memory clinics. Comfort and willingness to recruit for research were low to mod...
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Published in: | Neurodegenerative disease management Vol. 12; no. 3; pp. 117 - 127 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Future Medicine Ltd
01-06-2022
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | To understand clinician attitudes and the barriers that impede research recruitment from specialized primary care-based memory clinics.
Clinicians completed a survey on attitudes and barriers to research recruitment from memory clinics.
Comfort and willingness to recruit for research were low to moderate and were lower for drug trials than for observational and non-drug trials. Respondents believed that it is important to have a standardized recruitment process. Identified barriers provide some insights into the factors that contribute to discomfort and lack of willingness to recruit research participants.
Findings can inform future efforts to develop a recruitment process that addresses identified barriers, while also providing an opportunity to increase participant recruitment in dementia research.
Recruitment of persons living with dementia from primary care for research is challenging and can be a barrier to study completion. Multispecialty Interprofessional Team (MINT) Memory Clinics may provide a unique opportunity for recruiting patients for research studies. In this study, clinicians completed a survey on attitudes and barriers to research recruitment from memory clinics in primary care. Clinician comfort and willingness to recruit for research were low to moderate. A number of barriers to recruiting patients for research from MINT Clinics were identified and included limited time, workload issues, limited information to share with patients, and their lack of knowledge about and experience with research. These study findings can help to develop a recruitment process that addresses identified barriers and helps to increase participant recruitment in dementia research.
Barriers exist to recruiting research participants from primary-care-based interprofessional memory clinics. Addressing these barriers has the potential to increase recruitment for dementia research. |
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ISSN: | 1758-2024 1758-2032 |
DOI: | 10.2217/nmt-2021-0053 |