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Recruiting and retaining healthcare workers in Scotland to a longitudinal COVID-19 study: a descriptive analysis
by
Price, Lesley
, Haahr, Lynne
, Sergenson, Nicole
, Bishop, Jen
, Howells, Anna
, Munro, Katie
, Dembinsky, Melanie
, Evans, Josie MM
in
Adult
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Communication
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - epidemiology
/ Data collection
/ Disease transmission
/ Epidemics
/ Female
/ Health care workers
/ Health Personnel - statistics & numerical data
/ Health Sciences
/ Humans
/ Infections
/ Influence
/ Longitudinal Studies
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Methods
/ Middle Aged
/ Pandemics
/ Patient Selection
/ Prospective Studies
/ Questionnaires
/ Recruiting
/ Recruitment
/ Regression analysis
/ Retention
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Scotland
/ Scotland - epidemiology
/ Serology
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Social networks
/ Statistical Theory and Methods
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Surveillance
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
2024
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Recruiting and retaining healthcare workers in Scotland to a longitudinal COVID-19 study: a descriptive analysis
by
Price, Lesley
, Haahr, Lynne
, Sergenson, Nicole
, Bishop, Jen
, Howells, Anna
, Munro, Katie
, Dembinsky, Melanie
, Evans, Josie MM
in
Adult
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Communication
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - epidemiology
/ Data collection
/ Disease transmission
/ Epidemics
/ Female
/ Health care workers
/ Health Personnel - statistics & numerical data
/ Health Sciences
/ Humans
/ Infections
/ Influence
/ Longitudinal Studies
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Methods
/ Middle Aged
/ Pandemics
/ Patient Selection
/ Prospective Studies
/ Questionnaires
/ Recruiting
/ Recruitment
/ Regression analysis
/ Retention
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Scotland
/ Scotland - epidemiology
/ Serology
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Social networks
/ Statistical Theory and Methods
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Surveillance
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
Recruiting and retaining healthcare workers in Scotland to a longitudinal COVID-19 study: a descriptive analysis
by
Price, Lesley
, Haahr, Lynne
, Sergenson, Nicole
, Bishop, Jen
, Howells, Anna
, Munro, Katie
, Dembinsky, Melanie
, Evans, Josie MM
in
Adult
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Communication
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - epidemiology
/ Data collection
/ Disease transmission
/ Epidemics
/ Female
/ Health care workers
/ Health Personnel - statistics & numerical data
/ Health Sciences
/ Humans
/ Infections
/ Influence
/ Longitudinal Studies
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Methods
/ Middle Aged
/ Pandemics
/ Patient Selection
/ Prospective Studies
/ Questionnaires
/ Recruiting
/ Recruitment
/ Regression analysis
/ Retention
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Scotland
/ Scotland - epidemiology
/ Serology
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Social networks
/ Statistical Theory and Methods
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Surveillance
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
2024
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Recruiting and retaining healthcare workers in Scotland to a longitudinal COVID-19 study: a descriptive analysis
Journal Article
Recruiting and retaining healthcare workers in Scotland to a longitudinal COVID-19 study: a descriptive analysis
2024
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Overview
Background
Rapid timescales for the design and delivery of research were common during the COVID-19 pandemic. The recruitment and retention of healthcare workers (HCWs) as participants in research studies are notoriously challenging, but this was exacerbated during the pandemic by the unprecedented demand placed on the workforce. The SARS-CoV-2 Immunity and Reinfection Evaluation (SIREN study) is a prospective multicentre cohort study following HCWs in the UK. This paper discusses the strategies and challenges associated with recruitment and retention of HCW participants in Scotland.
Methods
There were 44,546 HCWs recruited to the SIREN study, of whom 6,285 were recruited by research teams at ten different research sites in Scotland between October 2020 and March 2021. Information on target and actual sample size, availability of resource, recruitment rate, and recruitment and engagement strategies by site was collated from SIREN study documentation and discussions with local key SIREN site staff. Individual-level data from 6,153 HCW participants with ongoing consent for all data usage were also collated, including socio-demographic data and information on withdrawal (in first year) and opt-in to a study extension after one year. Factors associated with these outcomes were explored in logistic regression analyses.
Results
Different recruitment strategies were used in each site according to local agreements, protocol and staff capacity, with the recruitment period ranging from 13 to 160 days. The locally-agreed recruitment target was met in four sites. The proportion of participants who withdrew in the first year ranged from 3.1 to 24.8% by site, while subsequent opt-in to a 12-month study extension ranged from 28.6 to 74.8%. The sites with the highest proportions of withdrawals were the same four sites with lowest proportions of opt-in. On an individual level, there was a lower level of retention among younger participants, and those from lower socio-economic backgrounds and minority ethnic groups.
Conclusions
Site-specific factors including research-readiness likely had a significant influence on recruitment and retention, more so than the specific recruitment or retention strategies employed. Independent of site factors, individual-level variables influenced recruitment and retention, suggesting targeted strategies may be needed to promote research engagement among particular socio-demographic groups.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
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