While extensive literature exists on barriers and strategies to increase minority participation in clinical trials, progress is limited. Few strategies were evaluated in randomized trials. We studied the impact of RECRUIT, a trust-based, cluster randomized minority recruitment trial layered on top of four traditional NIH-funded parent trials (BMT CTN, CABANA, PACES, STEADY-PD III; fifty specialty sites). RECRUIT was conducted from July 2013 through April 2017. Intervention sites implemented trust-based approaches customized to individual sites, promoting relationships between physician-investigators and minority-serving physicians and their minority patients. Control sites implemented only parent trials\u27 recruitment procedures. Adjusting...
Background: Study populations in clinical research must reflect US changing demographics, especially...
Abstract Background Despite efforts to increase diversity in clinical trials, racial/ethnic minority...
The purpose of this review is to describe the state of the art in recruiting participants for clinic...
Background: Racial/ethnic minority groups remain underrepresented in clinical trials. Many strategie...
Background/aimsRacial and ethnic minorities remain underrepresented in clinical research, yet few re...
Despite NIH mandates for inclusion, recruiting minorities is challenging for biomedical and public h...
Clinical trials are the established research mechanism designed to examine how new medical therapies...
Prevention and treatment standards are based on evidence obtained in behavioral and clinical researc...
Researchers\u27 ability to draw scientifically sound conclusions about the effectiveness of experime...
Research has shown that there continues to be insufficient recruitment of minorities in clinical tri...
Background: Despite the pervasive underrepresentation of minorities in health research studies, litt...
OBJECTIVE: This study aims to investigate research professionals\u27 perspectives regarding minority...
Background: This study used Community Partnered Participatory Research (CPPR) to address low partici...
Racial and ethnic diversity has historically been difficult to achieve in National Cancer Institute-...
The United States witnessed a nearly 4‐fold increase in personal health care expenditures between 19...
Background: Study populations in clinical research must reflect US changing demographics, especially...
Abstract Background Despite efforts to increase diversity in clinical trials, racial/ethnic minority...
The purpose of this review is to describe the state of the art in recruiting participants for clinic...
Background: Racial/ethnic minority groups remain underrepresented in clinical trials. Many strategie...
Background/aimsRacial and ethnic minorities remain underrepresented in clinical research, yet few re...
Despite NIH mandates for inclusion, recruiting minorities is challenging for biomedical and public h...
Clinical trials are the established research mechanism designed to examine how new medical therapies...
Prevention and treatment standards are based on evidence obtained in behavioral and clinical researc...
Researchers\u27 ability to draw scientifically sound conclusions about the effectiveness of experime...
Research has shown that there continues to be insufficient recruitment of minorities in clinical tri...
Background: Despite the pervasive underrepresentation of minorities in health research studies, litt...
OBJECTIVE: This study aims to investigate research professionals\u27 perspectives regarding minority...
Background: This study used Community Partnered Participatory Research (CPPR) to address low partici...
Racial and ethnic diversity has historically been difficult to achieve in National Cancer Institute-...
The United States witnessed a nearly 4‐fold increase in personal health care expenditures between 19...
Background: Study populations in clinical research must reflect US changing demographics, especially...
Abstract Background Despite efforts to increase diversity in clinical trials, racial/ethnic minority...
The purpose of this review is to describe the state of the art in recruiting participants for clinic...