Recruiting participants to walking intervention studies: a systematic review.

PURPOSE: Most researchers who are conducting physical activity trials face difficulties in recruiting participants who are representative of the population or from specific population groups. Participants who are often the hardest to recruit are often those who stand to benefit most (the least acti...

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Main Authors: Foster, C, Brennan, G, Matthews, A, McAdam, C, Fitzsimons, C, Mutrie, N
Format: Journal article
Jezik:English
Izdano: BioMed Central 2011
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author Foster, C
Brennan, G
Matthews, A
McAdam, C
Fitzsimons, C
Mutrie, N
author_facet Foster, C
Brennan, G
Matthews, A
McAdam, C
Fitzsimons, C
Mutrie, N
author_sort Foster, C
collection OXFORD
description PURPOSE: Most researchers who are conducting physical activity trials face difficulties in recruiting participants who are representative of the population or from specific population groups. Participants who are often the hardest to recruit are often those who stand to benefit most (the least active, from ethnic and other minority groups, from neighbourhoods with high levels of deprivation, or have poor health). The aim of our study was to conduct a systematic review of published literature of walking interventions, in order to identify the impact, characteristics, and differential effects of recruitment strategies among particular population groups. METHODS: We conducted standard searches for studies from four sources, (i) electronic literature databases and websites, (ii) grey literature from internet sources, (iii) contact with experts to identify additional "grey" and other literature, and (iv) snowballing from reference lists of retrieved articles. Included studies were randomised controlled trials, controlled before-and-after experimental or observational qualitative studies, examining the effects of an intervention to encourage people to walk independently or in a group setting, and detailing methods of recruitment. RESULTS: Forty seven studies met the inclusion criteria. The overall quality of the descriptions of recruitment in the studies was poor with little detail reported on who undertook recruitment, or how long was spent planning/preparing and implementing the recruitment phase. Recruitment was conducted at locations that either matched where the intervention was delivered, or where the potential participants were asked to attend for the screening and signing up process. We identified a lack of conceptual clarity about the recruitment process and no standard metric to evaluate the effectiveness of recruitment. CONCLUSION: Recruitment concepts, methods, and reporting in walking intervention trials are poorly developed, adding to other limitations in the literature, such as limited generalisability. The lack of understanding of optimal and equitable recruitment strategies evident from this review limits the impact of interventions to promote walking to particular social groups. To improve the delivery of walking interventions to groups which can benefit most, specific attention to developing and evaluating targeted recruitment approaches is recommended.
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spelling oxford-uuid:84d3c6e7-9210-4fb8-8fed-a1f5ab98fcec2022-03-26T21:53:42ZRecruiting participants to walking intervention studies: a systematic review.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:84d3c6e7-9210-4fb8-8fed-a1f5ab98fcecEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordBioMed Central2011Foster, CBrennan, GMatthews, AMcAdam, CFitzsimons, CMutrie, N PURPOSE: Most researchers who are conducting physical activity trials face difficulties in recruiting participants who are representative of the population or from specific population groups. Participants who are often the hardest to recruit are often those who stand to benefit most (the least active, from ethnic and other minority groups, from neighbourhoods with high levels of deprivation, or have poor health). The aim of our study was to conduct a systematic review of published literature of walking interventions, in order to identify the impact, characteristics, and differential effects of recruitment strategies among particular population groups. METHODS: We conducted standard searches for studies from four sources, (i) electronic literature databases and websites, (ii) grey literature from internet sources, (iii) contact with experts to identify additional "grey" and other literature, and (iv) snowballing from reference lists of retrieved articles. Included studies were randomised controlled trials, controlled before-and-after experimental or observational qualitative studies, examining the effects of an intervention to encourage people to walk independently or in a group setting, and detailing methods of recruitment. RESULTS: Forty seven studies met the inclusion criteria. The overall quality of the descriptions of recruitment in the studies was poor with little detail reported on who undertook recruitment, or how long was spent planning/preparing and implementing the recruitment phase. Recruitment was conducted at locations that either matched where the intervention was delivered, or where the potential participants were asked to attend for the screening and signing up process. We identified a lack of conceptual clarity about the recruitment process and no standard metric to evaluate the effectiveness of recruitment. CONCLUSION: Recruitment concepts, methods, and reporting in walking intervention trials are poorly developed, adding to other limitations in the literature, such as limited generalisability. The lack of understanding of optimal and equitable recruitment strategies evident from this review limits the impact of interventions to promote walking to particular social groups. To improve the delivery of walking interventions to groups which can benefit most, specific attention to developing and evaluating targeted recruitment approaches is recommended.
spellingShingle Foster, C
Brennan, G
Matthews, A
McAdam, C
Fitzsimons, C
Mutrie, N
Recruiting participants to walking intervention studies: a systematic review.
title Recruiting participants to walking intervention studies: a systematic review.
title_full Recruiting participants to walking intervention studies: a systematic review.
title_fullStr Recruiting participants to walking intervention studies: a systematic review.
title_full_unstemmed Recruiting participants to walking intervention studies: a systematic review.
title_short Recruiting participants to walking intervention studies: a systematic review.
title_sort recruiting participants to walking intervention studies a systematic review
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AT brennang recruitingparticipantstowalkinginterventionstudiesasystematicreview
AT matthewsa recruitingparticipantstowalkinginterventionstudiesasystematicreview
AT mcadamc recruitingparticipantstowalkinginterventionstudiesasystematicreview
AT fitzsimonsc recruitingparticipantstowalkinginterventionstudiesasystematicreview
AT mutrien recruitingparticipantstowalkinginterventionstudiesasystematicreview