Parental Factors Associated With the Decision to Participate in a Neonatal Clinical Trial

It remains poorly understood how parents decide whether to enroll a child in a neonatal clinical trial. This is particularly true for parents from racial or ethnic minority populations. Understanding factors associated with enrollment decisions may improve recruitment processes for families, increas...

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Veröffentlicht in:JAMA network open 2021-01, Vol.4 (1), p.e2032106-e2032106
Hauptverfasser: Weiss, Elliott Mark, Olszewski, Aleksandra E, Guttmann, Katherine F, Magnus, Brooke E, Li, Sijia, Shah, Anita R, Juul, Sandra E, Wu, Yvonne W, Ahmad, Kaashif A, Bendel-Stenzel, Ellen, Isaza, Natalia A, Lampland, Andrea L, Mathur, Amit M, Rao, Rakesh, Riley, David, Russell, David G, Salih, Zeynep N I, Torr, Carrie B, Weitkamp, Joern-Hendrik, Anani, Uchenna E, Chang, Taeun, Dudley, Juanita, Flibotte, John, Havrilla, Erin M, Kathen, Charmaine M, O'Kane, Alexandra C, Perez, Krystle, Stanley, Brenda J, Wilfond, Benjamin S, Shah, Seema K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:It remains poorly understood how parents decide whether to enroll a child in a neonatal clinical trial. This is particularly true for parents from racial or ethnic minority populations. Understanding factors associated with enrollment decisions may improve recruitment processes for families, increase enrollment rates, and decrease disparities in research participation. To assess differences in parental factors between parents who enrolled their infant and those who declined enrollment for a neonatal randomized clinical trial. This survey study conducted from July 2017 to October 2019 in 12 US level 3 and 4 neonatal intensive care units included parents of infants who enrolled in the High-dose Erythropoietin for Asphyxia and Encephalopathy (HEAL) trial or who were eligible but declined enrollment. Data were analyzed October 2019 through July 2020. Parental choice of enrollment in neonatal clinical trial. Percentages and odds ratios (ORs) of parent participation as categorized by demographic characteristics, self-assessment of child's medical condition, study comprehension, and trust in medical researchers. Survey questions were based on the hypothesis that parents who enrolled their infant in HEAL differ from those who declined enrollment across 4 categories: (1) infant characteristics and parental demographic characteristics, (2) perception of infant's illness, (3) study comprehension, and (4) trust in clinicians and researchers. Of a total 387 eligible parents, 269 (69.5%) completed the survey and were included in analysis. This included 183 of 242 (75.6%) of HEAL-enrolled and 86 of 145 (59.3%) of HEAL-declined parents. Parents who enrolled their infant had lower rates of Medicaid participation (74 [41.1%] vs 47 [55.3%]; P = .04) and higher rates of annual income greater than $55 000 (94 [52.8%] vs 30 [37.5%]; P = .03) compared with those who declined. Black parents had lower enrollment rates compared with White parents (OR, 0.35; 95% CI, 0.17-0.73). Parents who reported their infant's medical condition as more serious had higher enrollment rates (OR, 5.7; 95% CI, 2.0-16.3). Parents who enrolled their infant reported higher trust in medical researchers compared with parents who declined (mean [SD] difference, 5.3 [0.3-10.3]). There was no association between study comprehension and enrollment. In this study, the following factors were associated with neonatal clinical trial enrollment: demographic characteristics (ie, race/ethnicity, Medicaid status, and
ISSN:2574-3805
2574-3805
DOI:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.32106