» Articles » PMID: 10940152

Problems in Recruiting Community-based Physicians for Health Services Research

Overview
Publisher Springer
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2000 Aug 12
PMID 10940152
Citations 118
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective: To qualitatively determine factors that are associated with higher participation rates in community-based health services research requiring significant physician participation burden.

Measurements: A review of the literature was undertaken using MEDLINE and the Social Science Research Index to identify health services research studies that recruited large community-based samples of individual physicians and in which the participation burden exceeded that of merely completing a survey. Two reviewers abstracted data on the recruitment methods, and first authors were contacted to supplement published information.

Main Results: Sixteen studies were identified with participation rates from 2.5% to 91%. Almost all studies used physician recruiters to personally contact potential participants. Recruiters often knew some of the physicians to be recruited, and personal contact with these "known" physicians resulted in greater participation rates. Incentives were generally absent or modest, and at modest levels, did not appear to affect participation rates. Investigators were almost always affiliated with academic institutions, but were divided as to whether this helped or hindered recruitment. HMO-based and minority physicians were more difficult to recruit. Potential participants most often cited time pressures on staff and themselves as the study burden that caused them to decline.

Conclusions: Physician personal contact and friendship networks are powerful tools for recruitment. Participation rates might improve by including HMO and minority physicians in the recruitment process. Investigators should transfer as much of the study burden from participating physicians to project staff as possible.

Citing Articles

Understanding trends in osteoporosis drug prescribing: implications for reducing futile biomedical research.

Guillemot J, Abraham J, Tinker A Front Med (Lausanne). 2025; 11:1454150.

PMID: 39871840 PMC: 11770036. DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2024.1454150.


The Vulvodynia Primary Care Toolkit: results of a mixed-method evaluation with community-based family physicians in British Columbia.

Hunker K, Altas M, Goldsmith K, Farrell J, Bouchard K Fam Pract. 2025; 42(1.

PMID: 39834268 PMC: 11747290. DOI: 10.1093/fampra/cmaf002.


Towards collaborative care for severe and enduring Anorexia Nervosa - a mixed-method approach.

van den Eijnde-Damen I, Maas J, Burger P, Bodde N, Simeunovic-Ostojic M J Eat Disord. 2024; 12(1):124.

PMID: 39187908 PMC: 11346167. DOI: 10.1186/s40337-024-01091-z.


'' Comparing the opinion-based method with the prediction-based method in Continuing Medical Education course evaluation.

Chua J, van Diepen M, Trietsch M, Dekker F, Schonrock-Adema J, Bustraan J Can Med Educ J. 2024; 15(3):18-25.

PMID: 39114774 PMC: 11302746. DOI: 10.36834/cmej.77580.


Utilizing a patient advocacy-led clinical network to engage diverse, community-based sites in implementation-effectiveness research.

Ciupek A, Chichester L, Acharya R, Schofield E, Criswell A, Shelley D BMC Health Serv Res. 2024; 24(1):891.

PMID: 39103790 PMC: 11299353. DOI: 10.1186/s12913-024-11376-3.


References
1.
DOBIE S, HART L, Fordyce M, Andrilla C, Rosenblatt R . Obstetric care and payment source: do low-risk Medicaid women get less care?. Am J Public Health. 1998; 88(1):51-6. PMC: 1508388. DOI: 10.2105/ajph.88.1.51. View

2.
Baldwin L, Raine T, Jenkins L, HART L, Rosenblatt R . Do providers adhere to ACOG standards? The case of prenatal care. Obstet Gynecol. 1994; 84(4):549-56. View

3.
Waitzkin H, Britt T . Processing narratives of self-destructive behavior in routine medical encounters: health promotion, disease prevention, and the discourse of health care. Soc Sci Med. 1993; 36(9):1121-36. DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(93)90232-s. View

4.
Hirsch S, Schweitzer S, Atchison K, Lubben J, DeJong F . Enrolling community physicians and their patients in a study of prevention in the elderly. Public Health Rep. 1992; 107(2):142-9. PMC: 1403622. View

5.
Kottke T, Solberg L, Conn S, Maxwell P, Thomasberg M, Brekke M . A comparison of two methods to recruit physicians to deliver smoking cessation interventions. Arch Intern Med. 1990; 150(7):1477-81. View