Recruitment and Retention of Physicians for Primary Care Research

被引:0
|
作者
Brent J. Shelton
James L. Wofford
Carol A. Gosselink
Maureen W. McClatchey
Karen Brekke
Colleen Conry
Pamela Wolfe
Stuart J. Cohen
机构
[1] UAB School of Public Health,
[2] Internal Medicine and Family Practice at The Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center,undefined
[3] Southwest Missouri State University,undefined
[4] National Center for Children,undefined
[5] Families,undefined
[6] and Communities,undefined
[7] Practice Quality with Copic Insurance Company,undefined
[8] University of Colorado Health Sciences Center,undefined
[9] Colorado Foundation for Medical Care,undefined
[10] University of Arizona College of Public Health,undefined
来源
关键词
primary care research; physician recruitment; physician retention; study participation commitment;
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学科分类号
摘要
The primary objective of this report is to examine factors associated with recruitment of physicians in community-based primary care research. Reported results are based on an observational study of physician recruitment efforts undertaken in a randomized controlled trial designed to improve primary care physicians' cancer screening and counseling activities. The Partners for Prevention project was a state-wide randomized controlled trial of primary care physicians selected from the state of Colorado. Two-hundred and ten eligible internal medicine and family medicine practices in both rural and urban community settings of the state of Colorado were selected into this study and a sentinel physician was chosen to represent each practice. Only 6% (13/210) of recruited practices initially declined to participate in the study, but the total refusal rate had reached 30% (59/210) by the time the intervention was implemented five months later. Study participants (n = 136) were younger (mean age 45.7 vs. 50.0, p = 0.008) and more often located in a rural area (46% vs. 31%, p = 0.04) than decliners (n = 59), but there was no association with gender of the physician (87% for females vs. 95% for males, p = 0.13). Participants were more often family practice physicians by training rather than internists (75% vs. 56%, p = 0.008), whereas there was no difference in participation rates by practice type (solo versus group, 60% vs. 64%, p = 0.52). Differences in demographic, geographic, and training characteristics between trial participants and decliners suggest the potential for better targeting of recruitment efforts. Viable strategies for recruiting community-based primary care practices to research studies are proposed.
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页码:79 / 89
页数:10
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