2014
DOI: 10.21106/ijma.42
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Socio-ecological Model as a Framework for Overcoming Barriers and Challenges in Randomized Control Trials in Minority and Underserved Communities

Abstract: Background:Numerous barriers and challenges can hinder the successful enrollment and retention of study participants in clinical trials targeting minority populations. To conduct quality research, it is important to investigate these challenges, determine appropriate strategies that are evidence-based and continue seeking methods of improvement.Methods:In this paper, we report such experiences in a registered clinical trial in an underserved minority population in the Southern part of United States. This resea… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(72 citation statements)
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“…We also previously showed that a comprehensive initiative to address language barriers can improve adherence with scheduled appointments[2], but the retrospective nature of our observational cohort again precluded causal inference. As part of a comprehensive complex socioecological model [41], we developed a conceptional framework with a credible causal model for health care disparities in chronic pain, elements of which we tested in our present prospective controlled randomized pragmatic trial:…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We also previously showed that a comprehensive initiative to address language barriers can improve adherence with scheduled appointments[2], but the retrospective nature of our observational cohort again precluded causal inference. As part of a comprehensive complex socioecological model [41], we developed a conceptional framework with a credible causal model for health care disparities in chronic pain, elements of which we tested in our present prospective controlled randomized pragmatic trial:…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The model asserts that human health behavior, the experience of short birth interval in the current study, is influenced at multiple levels within the social and physical environment, such as the individual-, household-, community-and societal/policy-level factors [22][23][24]. The framework also assumes that interactions between individuals and their environment are reciprocal, implying that individuals are influenced by their environment and the environment is influenced by individuals [25]. For instance, an individual woman's literacy status is affected by community-level female literacy and vice versa.…”
Section: Exposure Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, Bronfenbrenner's (1979) ecological model also explains the various social systems in which human beings live as a series of layers. The ecological model posits that throughout the development of humans there is a reciprocal interaction of objects, humans and their environment (Salihu, Wilson, King, Marty & Whiteman, 2015). The interactions of different factors on the four levels (individual, relationship, political and societal) of social ecology could contribute to IPV.…”
Section: Theoretical Underpinningsmentioning
confidence: 99%