Background Recruitment of participants into long-term community-based lifestyle intervention trials, particularly adults with a chronic disease, is often slow and challenging. Currently there is limited data on successful recruitment strategies suitable for older adults with type 2 diabetes into community-based exercise and nutrition programs, and no information on cost estimates associated with such recruitment. The aim of this report is to describe the recruitment strategies used and the success of each approach in recruiting older adults with type 2 diabetes into a 6-month community-based exercise and nutritional supplementation randomised controlled trial (RCT). A secondary aim is to assess the costs associated with the recruitment meth...
Background: The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of Beat It—a community-based exercise a...
Background: Recruiting isolated older adults to clinical trials is complex, time-consuming and diffi...
Background. By 2025, it is estimated that approximately 1.8 million Australian adults (approximately...
Background: Recruitment of participants into long-term community-based lifestyle intervention trials...
BACKGROUND: Effective interventions are required to prevent the current rapid increase in the preval...
Clinical trials require cost-effective methods for identifying, randomising, and following large num...
Current research around effective recruitment strategies for clinical trials of dietary obesity trea...
Current research around effective recruitment strategies for clinical trials of dietary obesity trea...
Objectives: to outline the challenges and provide practical recommendations for recruiting inactive,...
BACKGROUND: Challenges of recruitment to randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and successful strategi...
Background: The success of a human intervention trial depends upon the ability to recruit eligible v...
Background: Participant adoption and maintenance is a major challenge in strength training (ST) prog...
Background: With the increasing need for high-quality exercise interventions in China, relatively li...
Background: Participant adoption and maintenance is a major challenge in strength training (ST) prog...
PurposeTo conduct and evaluate a two-phased community-based approach to recruit lower socioeconomic ...
Background: The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of Beat It—a community-based exercise a...
Background: Recruiting isolated older adults to clinical trials is complex, time-consuming and diffi...
Background. By 2025, it is estimated that approximately 1.8 million Australian adults (approximately...
Background: Recruitment of participants into long-term community-based lifestyle intervention trials...
BACKGROUND: Effective interventions are required to prevent the current rapid increase in the preval...
Clinical trials require cost-effective methods for identifying, randomising, and following large num...
Current research around effective recruitment strategies for clinical trials of dietary obesity trea...
Current research around effective recruitment strategies for clinical trials of dietary obesity trea...
Objectives: to outline the challenges and provide practical recommendations for recruiting inactive,...
BACKGROUND: Challenges of recruitment to randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and successful strategi...
Background: The success of a human intervention trial depends upon the ability to recruit eligible v...
Background: Participant adoption and maintenance is a major challenge in strength training (ST) prog...
Background: With the increasing need for high-quality exercise interventions in China, relatively li...
Background: Participant adoption and maintenance is a major challenge in strength training (ST) prog...
PurposeTo conduct and evaluate a two-phased community-based approach to recruit lower socioeconomic ...
Background: The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of Beat It—a community-based exercise a...
Background: Recruiting isolated older adults to clinical trials is complex, time-consuming and diffi...
Background. By 2025, it is estimated that approximately 1.8 million Australian adults (approximately...