People aged 85 and over are often excluded from research on the grounds of being difficult to recruit and problematic to retain. The Newcastle 85+ study successfully recruited a cohort of 854 85-year-olds to detailed health assessment at baseline and followed them up over 3 phases spanning 5 years. This paper describes the effectiveness of its retention strategies.Primary retention strategies involved meticulous management of contact information and active maintenance of contact with participants between research visits and between phases of the study. For statistical analysis, data on post-inclusion attrition over the 3 follow-up phases was separated into ‘death’ and ‘withdrawal’ categories, with sub-categories ‘health’ and ‘non-health’ re...
Abstract Background Factors associated with the loss of participants in long-term longitudinal studi...
PMCID: PMC3505167The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online ...
Objectives: Longitudinal studies of the elderly are complicated by the loss of individuals between w...
BACKGROUND: People aged 85 and over are often excluded from research on the grounds of being difficu...
Research that follows people over a period of time (longitudinal or panel studies) is increasingly r...
OBJECTIVE: To identify barriers and solutions for the recruitment and retention of older (aged ≥65 y...
BACKGROUND: Participant retention strategies that minimise attrition in longitudinal cohort studies ...
The increase in drop out rates, especially among older people, in longitudinal studies is a matter f...
Abstract Background There is a need for improving cohort retention in longitudinal studies. Our obje...
BACKGROUND: Factors associated with the loss of participants in long-term longitudinal studies of ag...
Background: older people remain underrepresented in clinical trials, and evidence generated in young...
Background: Factors associated with the loss of participants in long-term longitudinal studies of ag...
Background: adults aged ≥65 years are often excluded from health research studies. Lack of represent...
Background: Longitudinal studies are of aetiological and public health relevance but can be undermin...
Recruitment and retention of participants in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) drawn from the olde...
Abstract Background Factors associated with the loss of participants in long-term longitudinal studi...
PMCID: PMC3505167The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online ...
Objectives: Longitudinal studies of the elderly are complicated by the loss of individuals between w...
BACKGROUND: People aged 85 and over are often excluded from research on the grounds of being difficu...
Research that follows people over a period of time (longitudinal or panel studies) is increasingly r...
OBJECTIVE: To identify barriers and solutions for the recruitment and retention of older (aged ≥65 y...
BACKGROUND: Participant retention strategies that minimise attrition in longitudinal cohort studies ...
The increase in drop out rates, especially among older people, in longitudinal studies is a matter f...
Abstract Background There is a need for improving cohort retention in longitudinal studies. Our obje...
BACKGROUND: Factors associated with the loss of participants in long-term longitudinal studies of ag...
Background: older people remain underrepresented in clinical trials, and evidence generated in young...
Background: Factors associated with the loss of participants in long-term longitudinal studies of ag...
Background: adults aged ≥65 years are often excluded from health research studies. Lack of represent...
Background: Longitudinal studies are of aetiological and public health relevance but can be undermin...
Recruitment and retention of participants in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) drawn from the olde...
Abstract Background Factors associated with the loss of participants in long-term longitudinal studi...
PMCID: PMC3505167The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online ...
Objectives: Longitudinal studies of the elderly are complicated by the loss of individuals between w...