Challenges faced in recruiting patients from primary care practices into a physical activity intervention trial. Activity Counseling Trial Research Group

Prev Med. 1999 Oct;29(4):277-86. doi: 10.1006/pmed.1999.0543.

Abstract

Background: Special challenges are encountered when clinical trial recruitment targets a physician practice-based population, as opposed to recruiting from the community. Since most published information about recruitment has focused on the latter group, summation of successful primary-care-based recruitment strategies could prove useful for future trials recruiting from this population.

Methods: The Activity Counseling Trial (ACT) is a multicenter, randomized clinical trial that evaluated approaches to primary care-based interventions to increase physical activity in sedentary adults 35-75 years of age. Fifty-four clinicians from eight practices recruited 874 participants from three U.S. sites. Recruitment challenges that related, in great part, to the primary care setting included: (1) focusing on patients from ACT physician practices who had regularly scheduled or intend-to-schedule appointments within the next year; (2) placing trial staff in the clinical offices for recruitment purposes; and (3) placing trial interventionists in the physicians' offices. Other challenges were related to recruitment of minorities and men.

Results: Patient mailing yielded 43.4% of all randomized participants, followed by office-based questionnaires (32.5%) and direct telephone contact (21.6%). Based on a retrospective cost-effective analysis (indirect costs excluded), the self-administered office-based questionnaire was the least costly strategy for one site ($14/randomized participant), followed by patient mailing at another site ($58). The direct telephone contact method utilized at one site serving primarily a minority population yielded a per randomized participant cost of $80.

Conclusions: Recruitment of clinical trial participants from practice-based populations requires modification of the strategies used to recruit from the community. Multiple strategies should be employed, followed closely for their respective yields, and adapted as needed.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Correspondence as Topic*
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Counseling
  • Exercise*
  • Family Practice*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Multicenter Studies as Topic*
  • Office Visits
  • Patient Selection*
  • Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic*
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Surveys and Questionnaires* / economics
  • Telephone* / economics