Publication | Closed Access
Recruiting patients into a primary care based study of palliative care: why is it so difficult?
163
Citations
28
References
2004
Year
Family MedicinePatient SelectionResearch EthicsPrimary CareEnd-of-life CareSymptomatic TreatmentEthic CommitteePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchHuman Research EthicResearch Governance LegislationHealth PolicyOutcomes ResearchHospicePalliative CareNursingInformed ConsentEthical ReviewTerminal IllnessMedicine
In the UK, researchers' access to study populations and control over selection of participants is becoming increasingly constrained by data protection and research governance legislation. Intervening stages placed between researchers and the population they wish to study can have serious effects on recruitment and ultimately on the validity of studies. In this paper we describe our experiences of gaining access to patients for a study of palliative care in primary care. Despite considerable time and resources dedicated to recruitment, a smaller than anticipated study sample was achieved. We found that gatekeeping by ethics committees and practitioner control over sample selection were significant hurdles in accessing patients for the study. Gatekeeping responsibilities represent considerable challenges for researchers seeking to obtain a representative study sample, not just in palliative care, but for research in general in health care.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1