Background Identifying and approaching eligible participants for recruitment to research studies usually relies on healthcare professionals. This process is sometimes hampered by deliberate or inadvertent gatekeeping that can introduce bias into patient selection. Objectives Our primary objective was to identify and assess the effect of strategies designed to help healthcare professionals to recruit participants to research studies. Search methods We performed searches on 5 January 2015 in the following electronic databases: Cochrane Methodology Register, CENTRAL, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, British Nursing Index, PsycINFO, ASSIA and Web of Science (SSCI, SCI-EXPANDED) from 1985 onwards. We checked the reference lists of all included studies a...
BACKGROUND: Recruiting the desired number of research participants is frequently problematic with re...
WS is a PhD student funded by the University of St Andrews.Background: Recruiting participants to a ...
Background: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are frequently unable to recruit sufficient number...
Background Identifying and approaching eligible participants for recruitment to research studies us...
This is the protocol for a review and there is no abstract. The objectives are as follows: Our prima...
BACKGROUND: Research studies are essential to improving healthcare. However, many fail to recruit th...
BACKGROUND: Recruiting participants to trials can be extremely difficult. Identifying strategies tha...
Sources of support Internal sources: Scottish Funding Council, UK. / Rigshospitalet, Denmark. Extern...
Background: Recruiting participants to trials can be extremely difficult. Identifying strategies th...
This review is an abridged version of a Cochrane Review previously published in the Cochrane Databas...
BACKGROUND: Recruiting participants to trials can be extremely difficult. Identifying strategies tha...
This study is supported by a PhD studentship provided by the University of St Andrews.Background: Ra...
Objective: To identify interventions designed to improve recruitment to randomised controlled trials...
Recruitment of participants into randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is critical for successful tria...
Objectives The objectives of this scoping review are to: (1) identify the distribution of and contex...
BACKGROUND: Recruiting the desired number of research participants is frequently problematic with re...
WS is a PhD student funded by the University of St Andrews.Background: Recruiting participants to a ...
Background: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are frequently unable to recruit sufficient number...
Background Identifying and approaching eligible participants for recruitment to research studies us...
This is the protocol for a review and there is no abstract. The objectives are as follows: Our prima...
BACKGROUND: Research studies are essential to improving healthcare. However, many fail to recruit th...
BACKGROUND: Recruiting participants to trials can be extremely difficult. Identifying strategies tha...
Sources of support Internal sources: Scottish Funding Council, UK. / Rigshospitalet, Denmark. Extern...
Background: Recruiting participants to trials can be extremely difficult. Identifying strategies th...
This review is an abridged version of a Cochrane Review previously published in the Cochrane Databas...
BACKGROUND: Recruiting participants to trials can be extremely difficult. Identifying strategies tha...
This study is supported by a PhD studentship provided by the University of St Andrews.Background: Ra...
Objective: To identify interventions designed to improve recruitment to randomised controlled trials...
Recruitment of participants into randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is critical for successful tria...
Objectives The objectives of this scoping review are to: (1) identify the distribution of and contex...
BACKGROUND: Recruiting the desired number of research participants is frequently problematic with re...
WS is a PhD student funded by the University of St Andrews.Background: Recruiting participants to a ...
Background: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are frequently unable to recruit sufficient number...