2022
DOI: 10.1093/cdn/nzac012
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Recruitment and Retention of Healthy, Postmenopausal Women of African and European Ancestry: Results from a Dietary Intervention with Repeated Biospecimen Collections

Abstract: Recruitment of minority participants to clinical trials, especially studies without therapeutic intent, has been historically challenging. This study describes barriers to and successes of recruitment and retention strategies to dietary studies. A flaxseed study was conducted in healthy, postmenopausal women of African ancestry (AA) and European ancestry (EA) to assess associations between gut microbial community composition and host metabolism (NCT01698294). To ensure equitable participation by AA and EA, mul… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…4,5 Recruitment and retention of Black women in research studies have been historically inadequate. 6,7 Thus, there has been a recent push to include midlife Black women in research studies to deepen our understanding of the factors affecting their health, preventive lifestyle behaviors, and overall wellbeing. For those studies that report success in the areas of recruitment and/or retention of midlife Black women, it is important to also publish measures of participant satisfaction.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…4,5 Recruitment and retention of Black women in research studies have been historically inadequate. 6,7 Thus, there has been a recent push to include midlife Black women in research studies to deepen our understanding of the factors affecting their health, preventive lifestyle behaviors, and overall wellbeing. For those studies that report success in the areas of recruitment and/or retention of midlife Black women, it is important to also publish measures of participant satisfaction.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For those studies that report success in the areas of recruitment and/or retention of midlife Black women, it is important to also publish measures of participant satisfaction. 7,8 Such reports can provide insight for replication of interventions, inform intervention development, and aid future research intended to address health disparities impacting midlife Black women.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%