Recruitment and retention of african american elders into community-based research: Lessons learned
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Cited by (83)
Mutuality in nurse-caregiver relationships in pediatric nursing: A concept analysis
2023, Journal of Pediatric NursingCommunity-Engaged Approaches for Minority Recruitment Into Clinical Research: A Scoping Review of the Literature
2021, Mayo Clinic ProceedingsCitation Excerpt :Findings were that CABs brought community voice to the research and recruitment process and facilitated connections with difficult-to-reach stakeholders and that this input substantially changed initial recruitment plans. Involvement was classified as the CEnR strategy for recruitment of minority participants in 24 studies.27,28,30,31,40,43,48–50,54,56,57,60,61,63,65,72,74,76,77,82,84,86,87 In most of these studies, a CAB directly participated in recruitment through social networks and by applying sociocultural knowledge.
Child Directed Interaction Training for young children in kinship care: A pilot study
2016, Child Abuse and NeglectCitation Excerpt :As recommended by Dennis and Neese (2000) for increasing study participation from diverse populations, culturally sensitive and easy-to-understand terms were used (such as “classes” and “trainer” rather than “treatment” or “therapist”) when describing the study. The mutual benefits of the research to both participant and researcher were also explained (Dennis & Neese, 2000). After describing the study, a brief questionnaire on study eligibility and the ECBI Problem Scale were administered to the caregiver.
An intensely sympathetic awareness: Experiential similarity and cultural norms as means for gaining older African Americans' trust of scientific research
2014, Journal of Aging StudiesCitation Excerpt :In a study of 1440 randomly selected patients from 13 Maryland medical clinics, African American participants were significantly more likely than white participants to report that doctors would use them as guinea pigs without their consent; prescribe medications as a way of experimenting on people without their knowledge; ask them to participate in research even if it would harm them; and that doctors had previously experimented on them without their consent (Braunstein et al., 2008), even after controlling for age, socio-economic status, sex, and health risk status. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has mandated the inclusion of women and ethnic minorities in all NIH-funded research projects involving human participants (Arean et al., 2003; Curry & Jackson, 2003; Dennis & Neese, 2000; Reed et al., 2003). The US Department of Health and Human Services and the Resource Centers for Minority Aging Research also enjoin researchers to improve the science of including older African Americans in scientific research studies (Chadiha et al., 2011; Sood & Stahl, 2011), thus researchers must identify strategies that settle this issue of trust if they are to consistently attract and engage older African American participants.
Recruitment of Older African American Males for Depression Research: Lessons Learned
2014, Archives of Psychiatric Nursing
Supported by the National Institute for Nursing Research (grant no. K01NR00092) and the Center for Research on Chronic Illness, School of Nursing, UNC Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC.