Patient recruitment in primary care research

Introduction: Patient recruitment in primary health research is often a protracted and frustrating process yet research guiding patient recruitment strategies in primary setting is limited. This paper addresses this void through a systematic review and how the systematic review informs the Wheatbelt...

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Main Authors: Ngune, Irene, Lim, David, Jiwa, Moyez
Other Authors: NPS
Format: Conference Paper
Published: NPS 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/26256
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author Ngune, Irene
Lim, David
Jiwa, Moyez
author2 NPS
author_facet NPS
Ngune, Irene
Lim, David
Jiwa, Moyez
author_sort Ngune, Irene
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Introduction: Patient recruitment in primary health research is often a protracted and frustrating process yet research guiding patient recruitment strategies in primary setting is limited. This paper addresses this void through a systematic review and how the systematic review informs the Wheatbelt Chronic Disease Management research projects. Method: Articles were sourced from five academic databases and snowball referencing. Inclusion criteria were papers published in English, reported empirical research, focused on interventions designed to increase patient recruitment in primary health care setting, and reported patient recruitment in primary setting. Results: 66 articles met the inclusion criteria. Effective recruitment strategies included the involvement of a discipline champion, simple patient eligibility criteria, patient incentives, and organisational strategies that reduce practitioner workload. Conclusion: The most effective recruitment in primary care research requires practitioner involvement.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-262562020-09-18T01:55:19Z Patient recruitment in primary care research Ngune, Irene Lim, David Jiwa, Moyez NPS methodology Introduction: Patient recruitment in primary health research is often a protracted and frustrating process yet research guiding patient recruitment strategies in primary setting is limited. This paper addresses this void through a systematic review and how the systematic review informs the Wheatbelt Chronic Disease Management research projects. Method: Articles were sourced from five academic databases and snowball referencing. Inclusion criteria were papers published in English, reported empirical research, focused on interventions designed to increase patient recruitment in primary health care setting, and reported patient recruitment in primary setting. Results: 66 articles met the inclusion criteria. Effective recruitment strategies included the involvement of a discipline champion, simple patient eligibility criteria, patient incentives, and organisational strategies that reduce practitioner workload. Conclusion: The most effective recruitment in primary care research requires practitioner involvement. 2012 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/26256 NPS restricted
spellingShingle methodology
Ngune, Irene
Lim, David
Jiwa, Moyez
Patient recruitment in primary care research
title Patient recruitment in primary care research
title_full Patient recruitment in primary care research
title_fullStr Patient recruitment in primary care research
title_full_unstemmed Patient recruitment in primary care research
title_short Patient recruitment in primary care research
title_sort patient recruitment in primary care research
topic methodology
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/26256