Background: Non-retention of participants seriously affects the credibility of clinical trial results and significantly reduces the potential of a trial to influence clinical practice. Non-retention can be defined as instances where participants leave the study prematurely. Examples include withdrawal of consent and loss to follow-up and thus outcome data cannot be obtained. The majority of existing interventions targeting retention fail to describe any theoretical basis for the observed improvement, or lack of improvement. Moreover, most of these interventions lack involvement of participants in their conception and/or design, raising questions about their relevance and acceptability. Many of the causes of non-retention involve people perf...
OBJECTIVE: To explore stakeholder perspectives upon participant retention in clinical trials, and to...
OBJECTIVE: To develop best practice guidance for the use of retention strategies in randomised clini...
Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank all stakeholders who took part, all respondents to ...
Background: Non-retention of participants seriously affects the credibility of clinical trial result...
Background Non-retention of participants seriously affects the credibility of clinical trial result...
Funding: This research is funded by the Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government’s Health a...
This research was supported by the Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government’s Health and So...
Abstract Background A failure of clinical trials to retain participa...
Background: Loss to follow-up from randomised trials can introduce bias and reduce study power, affe...
This work is part of AE’s PhD which is funded by the University of Aberdeen Elphinstone Scholarship....
Objective: To quantify the effect of strategies to improve retention in randomised trials.<p></p> ...
Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank Rumana Newlands (RN) for her work in conducting the...
Acknowledgements: The authors would like to thank Cynthia Fraser for her assistance in helping devel...
Background One of the top three research priorities for the UK clinical trial community is to addres...
Funding This research forms part of a doctoral research project supported by the Health Research Boa...
OBJECTIVE: To explore stakeholder perspectives upon participant retention in clinical trials, and to...
OBJECTIVE: To develop best practice guidance for the use of retention strategies in randomised clini...
Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank all stakeholders who took part, all respondents to ...
Background: Non-retention of participants seriously affects the credibility of clinical trial result...
Background Non-retention of participants seriously affects the credibility of clinical trial result...
Funding: This research is funded by the Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government’s Health a...
This research was supported by the Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government’s Health and So...
Abstract Background A failure of clinical trials to retain participa...
Background: Loss to follow-up from randomised trials can introduce bias and reduce study power, affe...
This work is part of AE’s PhD which is funded by the University of Aberdeen Elphinstone Scholarship....
Objective: To quantify the effect of strategies to improve retention in randomised trials.<p></p> ...
Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank Rumana Newlands (RN) for her work in conducting the...
Acknowledgements: The authors would like to thank Cynthia Fraser for her assistance in helping devel...
Background One of the top three research priorities for the UK clinical trial community is to addres...
Funding This research forms part of a doctoral research project supported by the Health Research Boa...
OBJECTIVE: To explore stakeholder perspectives upon participant retention in clinical trials, and to...
OBJECTIVE: To develop best practice guidance for the use of retention strategies in randomised clini...
Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank all stakeholders who took part, all respondents to ...