Background: Recruiting patients to large randomised controlled trials (RCTs) in the primary care setting can be challenging. Research teams need to identify and utilise strategies that both maximise the efficiency of recruitment and minimise the burden on general practitioners. Purpose: To describe our methods for identifying, approaching and recruiting female patients aged 50–69 years to a long-term double-blind RCT of hormone therapy (HT) – the Women's International Study of long Duration Oestrogen after Menopause (WISDOM). The effectiveness of conducting group seminars with patients prior to one-to-one screening is discussed. Methods: Female patients aged between 50 and 69 years were sent letters from participating general practitioners ...
Objective To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 wo...
BACKGROUND: Recruiting cancer patients is a barrier often encountered in research trials. However, v...
Background: Recruitment and retention of patients and healthcare providers in randomised controlled ...
Background: Recruiting isolated older adults to clinical trials is complex, time-consuming and diffi...
Recruitment of participants into randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is critical for successful tria...
BACKGROUND: Primary-care based randomized controlled trials (RCTs) build an important evidence base ...
OBJECTIVE:To assess the factors that contributed to the successful completion of recruitment for the...
Background: Recruiting to primary care studies is complex. With the current drive to increase number...
Background: Patient understanding of study information is fundamental to gaining informed consent to...
BACKGROUND: Recruitment and retention of patients and healthcare providers in randomised controlled ...
BACKGROUND: Patient recruitment to clinical research is often challenging and, when inadequate, can ...
Background: The success of a human intervention trial depends upon the ability to recruit eligible v...
Background: older people remain underrepresented in clinical trials, and evidence generated in young...
BackgroundA common challenge for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is recruiting enough participan...
Background: Older patients with multimorbidity are under-represented in experimental research. Objec...
Objective To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 wo...
BACKGROUND: Recruiting cancer patients is a barrier often encountered in research trials. However, v...
Background: Recruitment and retention of patients and healthcare providers in randomised controlled ...
Background: Recruiting isolated older adults to clinical trials is complex, time-consuming and diffi...
Recruitment of participants into randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is critical for successful tria...
BACKGROUND: Primary-care based randomized controlled trials (RCTs) build an important evidence base ...
OBJECTIVE:To assess the factors that contributed to the successful completion of recruitment for the...
Background: Recruiting to primary care studies is complex. With the current drive to increase number...
Background: Patient understanding of study information is fundamental to gaining informed consent to...
BACKGROUND: Recruitment and retention of patients and healthcare providers in randomised controlled ...
BACKGROUND: Patient recruitment to clinical research is often challenging and, when inadequate, can ...
Background: The success of a human intervention trial depends upon the ability to recruit eligible v...
Background: older people remain underrepresented in clinical trials, and evidence generated in young...
BackgroundA common challenge for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is recruiting enough participan...
Background: Older patients with multimorbidity are under-represented in experimental research. Objec...
Objective To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 wo...
BACKGROUND: Recruiting cancer patients is a barrier often encountered in research trials. However, v...
Background: Recruitment and retention of patients and healthcare providers in randomised controlled ...