Background: Recruiting participants to multicentre, community-based trials is a challenge. This case study describes how this challenge was met for the BeWEL trial, which evaluated the impact of a diet and physical activity intervention on body weight in people who had had pre-cancerous bowel polyps. Methods: The BeWEL trial was a community-based trial, involving centres linked to the Scottish National Health Service (NHS) colorectal cancer screening programme. BeWEL had a recruitment target of 316 and its primary recruitment route was the colonoscopy clinics of the Scottish Bowel Screening Programme. Results: BeWEL exceeded its recruitment target but needed a 6-month no-cost extension from the funder to achieve this. The major causes of de...
Background: One of the most commonly reported problems of randomised trials is that recruitment is u...
Background: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) have a reputation for being inherently difficult to...
Objective To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 wo...
Background: Recruitment to randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is a perennial problem. Calls have be...
Recruiting participants to multicentre, community-based trials is a challenge. This case study descr...
Acknowledgements We are grateful to the nurses who were involved in the recruitment and study partic...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200,000 w...
BackgroundRecruitment to randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is a perennial problem. Calls have been...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200,000 w...
Objective: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 w...
Background: The BeWEL randomised controlled trial (RCT) of weight loss in people with colorectal ade...
Background: One of the most commonly reported problems of randomised trials is that recruitment is u...
Background: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) have a reputation for being inherently difficult to...
Objective To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 wo...
Background: Recruitment to randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is a perennial problem. Calls have be...
Recruiting participants to multicentre, community-based trials is a challenge. This case study descr...
Acknowledgements We are grateful to the nurses who were involved in the recruitment and study partic...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200,000 w...
BackgroundRecruitment to randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is a perennial problem. Calls have been...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200,000 w...
Objective: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 w...
Background: The BeWEL randomised controlled trial (RCT) of weight loss in people with colorectal ade...
Background: One of the most commonly reported problems of randomised trials is that recruitment is u...
Background: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) have a reputation for being inherently difficult to...
Objective To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 wo...