• Womens Health Issues · Jan 2014

    Implementing a prospective study of women seeking abortion in the United States: understanding and overcoming barriers to recruitment.

    • Loren M Dobkin, Heather Gould, Rana E Barar, Michaela Ferrari, Elisette I Weiss, and Diana Greene Foster.
    • Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health (ANSIRH), Bixby Center for Global Reproductive Health, University of California, San Francisco, Oakland, California; Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
    • Womens Health Issues. 2014 Jan 1; 24 (1): e115-23.

    BackgroundThe Turnaway Study is designed to prospectively study the outcomes of women who sought-but did not all obtain-abortions. This design permits more accurate inferences about the health consequences of abortion for women, but requires the recruitment of a large number of women from remote health care facilities to a study a sensitive topic. This paper explores the Turnaway Study's recruitment process.MethodsFrom 2008 to 2010, the staff at 30 abortion-providing facilities recruited eligible female patients. Eight interventions were evaluated using multilevel logistic regression for their impact on eligible patients being approached, approached patients agreeing to go through informed consent by phone, and enrolled patients completing the baseline interview.FindingsAfter site visits, patients had roughly twice the odds of being approached by facility staff and twice the odds of then agreeing to go through informed consent. When all recruitment steps were considered together, the net effect of site visits was to increase the odds that eligible patients participated by nearly a factor of six. After the introduction of a patient gift card incentive, patients had over three times the odds of agreeing to go through informed consent. With each passing month, however, staff demonstrated a 9% reduced odds of approaching eligible patients about the study.ConclusionPrioritizing scientific rigor over the convenience of using existing datasets, the Turnaway Study confronted recruitment challenges common to medical practice-based studies and unique to sensitive services. Visiting sites and communicating frequently with facility staff, as well as offering incentives to patients to hear more about the study before informed consent, may help to increase participation in prospective health studies and facilitate evaluation of sensitive women's health services.Copyright © 2014 Jacobs Institute of Women's Health. All rights reserved.

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