Factors that influence African‐Americans' willingness to participate in medical research studies

BACKGROUND The underrepresentation of African‐Americans among medical research participants is receiving considerable attention because of recent government mandates for the inclusion of all racial/ethnic groups in human subject research. Therefore, there is a need to determine factors that influenc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer 2001-01, Vol.91 (S1), p.233-236
Hauptverfasser: Shavers, Vickie L., Lynch, Charles F., Burmeister, Leon F.
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container_title Cancer
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creator Shavers, Vickie L.
Lynch, Charles F.
Burmeister, Leon F.
description BACKGROUND The underrepresentation of African‐Americans among medical research participants is receiving considerable attention because of recent government mandates for the inclusion of all racial/ethnic groups in human subject research. Therefore, there is a need to determine factors that influence minority enrollment in medical research studies. METHODS Between 1998–1999, 91 African‐American residents of the Detroit Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area participated in a mail and telephone survey designed to examine impediments to participation in medical research studies. Chi‐square tests and multiple logistic regression analyses were used to examine the association between race, issues related to trust in medical researchers, and the willingness to participate in medical research studies. RESULTS African‐American respondents were somewhat less willing to participate if they attributed high importance to the race of the physician when seeking routine medical care, believed that minorities or the poor bear most of the risks of medical research, and, most especially, their knowledge of the Tuskegee Study resulted in less trust in medical researchers. CONCLUSIONS These data reiterate the need for medical researchers to build trusting relations with African‐Americans and to conduct research in an ethical manner. This includes maximizing benefits, reducing risks, and assuring distributive justice to all medical research study participants. Cancer 2001;91:233–6. © 2001 American Cancer Society. The underrepresentation of African‐Americans among medical research participants is receiving considerable attention because of recent government mandates for the inclusion of all racial/ethnic groups in human subject research. In the current study, the authors attempt to determine factors that affect the willingness of racial/ethnic minorities to participate in medical research studies.
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Therefore, there is a need to determine factors that influence minority enrollment in medical research studies. METHODS Between 1998–1999, 91 African‐American residents of the Detroit Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area participated in a mail and telephone survey designed to examine impediments to participation in medical research studies. Chi‐square tests and multiple logistic regression analyses were used to examine the association between race, issues related to trust in medical researchers, and the willingness to participate in medical research studies. RESULTS African‐American respondents were somewhat less willing to participate if they attributed high importance to the race of the physician when seeking routine medical care, believed that minorities or the poor bear most of the risks of medical research, and, most especially, their knowledge of the Tuskegee Study resulted in less trust in medical researchers. CONCLUSIONS These data reiterate the need for medical researchers to build trusting relations with African‐Americans and to conduct research in an ethical manner. This includes maximizing benefits, reducing risks, and assuring distributive justice to all medical research study participants. Cancer 2001;91:233–6. © 2001 American Cancer Society. The underrepresentation of African‐Americans among medical research participants is receiving considerable attention because of recent government mandates for the inclusion of all racial/ethnic groups in human subject research. 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Therefore, there is a need to determine factors that influence minority enrollment in medical research studies. METHODS Between 1998–1999, 91 African‐American residents of the Detroit Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area participated in a mail and telephone survey designed to examine impediments to participation in medical research studies. Chi‐square tests and multiple logistic regression analyses were used to examine the association between race, issues related to trust in medical researchers, and the willingness to participate in medical research studies. RESULTS African‐American respondents were somewhat less willing to participate if they attributed high importance to the race of the physician when seeking routine medical care, believed that minorities or the poor bear most of the risks of medical research, and, most especially, their knowledge of the Tuskegee Study resulted in less trust in medical researchers. CONCLUSIONS These data reiterate the need for medical researchers to build trusting relations with African‐Americans and to conduct research in an ethical manner. This includes maximizing benefits, reducing risks, and assuring distributive justice to all medical research study participants. Cancer 2001;91:233–6. © 2001 American Cancer Society. The underrepresentation of African‐Americans among medical research participants is receiving considerable attention because of recent government mandates for the inclusion of all racial/ethnic groups in human subject research. 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source Wiley Free Content; MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adult
African Americans - psychology
Biological and medical sciences
Clinical Trials as Topic
Cultural Characteristics
Ethics, Medical
Female
General aspects
Health Behavior
Health Surveys
Humans
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Patient Participation
Risk Factors
Truth Disclosure
title Factors that influence African‐Americans' willingness to participate in medical research studies
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