Internet-Based Recruitment to a Depression Prevention Intervention: Lessons From the Mood Memos Study

BackgroundRecruiting participants to randomized controlled trials of health interventions can be very difficult. Internet-based recruitment is becoming an increasingly important mode of recruitment, yet there are few detailed accounts of experiences recruiting participants to...

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Main Authors: Morgan, Amy Joanna, Jorm, Anthony Francis, Mackinnon, Andrew James
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2013-02-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:http://www.jmir.org/2013/2/e31/
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spelling doaj-2318996c5b4140cd95e3f37083656a7b2021-04-02T19:20:51ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712013-02-01152e3110.2196/jmir.2262Internet-Based Recruitment to a Depression Prevention Intervention: Lessons From the Mood Memos StudyMorgan, Amy JoannaJorm, Anthony FrancisMackinnon, Andrew James BackgroundRecruiting participants to randomized controlled trials of health interventions can be very difficult. Internet-based recruitment is becoming an increasingly important mode of recruitment, yet there are few detailed accounts of experiences recruiting participants to mental health interventions. ObjectiveTo report on our experience with Internet-based recruitment to an online depression prevention intervention and pass on lessons we learned. MethodsParticipants were recruited to the Mood Memos study, an online preventive depression intervention, purely through Internet-based sources. The study was targeted to adults with subthreshold depression symptoms from several English-speaking countries. A variety of online recruitment sources were trialed, including search engine advertising (Google, Yahoo!, Bing), Facebook advertising, posts in forums and online noticeboards, and promotion through relevant websites and email newsletters of mental health organizations. ResultsThe study website received visits from 94,808 individuals over the 14-month recruitment period. The recruitment target was reached with 1699 individuals signing up to the randomized controlled trial and 1326 fully enrolling. Most visitors arrived via Google advertising, which promoted a depression-screening questionnaire. Google advertising accounted for nearly half of the total participants who signed up to the study, at an average cost of AUD $12 per participant. Promoting the study through trustworthy organizations and websites known to participants was also effective. Recruitment techniques that were less effective were contacting forums, email groups, and community noticeboards. ConclusionsSeveral techniques, including Google advertising, were successful in recruiting participants to a trial evaluating an online depression intervention. Results suggest that Internet-based recruitment to mental health interventions is feasible and can be relatively affordable. Trial RegistrationACTRN12609000925246http://www.jmir.org/2013/2/e31/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Morgan, Amy Joanna
Jorm, Anthony Francis
Mackinnon, Andrew James
spellingShingle Morgan, Amy Joanna
Jorm, Anthony Francis
Mackinnon, Andrew James
Internet-Based Recruitment to a Depression Prevention Intervention: Lessons From the Mood Memos Study
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Morgan, Amy Joanna
Jorm, Anthony Francis
Mackinnon, Andrew James
author_sort Morgan, Amy Joanna
title Internet-Based Recruitment to a Depression Prevention Intervention: Lessons From the Mood Memos Study
title_short Internet-Based Recruitment to a Depression Prevention Intervention: Lessons From the Mood Memos Study
title_full Internet-Based Recruitment to a Depression Prevention Intervention: Lessons From the Mood Memos Study
title_fullStr Internet-Based Recruitment to a Depression Prevention Intervention: Lessons From the Mood Memos Study
title_full_unstemmed Internet-Based Recruitment to a Depression Prevention Intervention: Lessons From the Mood Memos Study
title_sort internet-based recruitment to a depression prevention intervention: lessons from the mood memos study
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2013-02-01
description BackgroundRecruiting participants to randomized controlled trials of health interventions can be very difficult. Internet-based recruitment is becoming an increasingly important mode of recruitment, yet there are few detailed accounts of experiences recruiting participants to mental health interventions. ObjectiveTo report on our experience with Internet-based recruitment to an online depression prevention intervention and pass on lessons we learned. MethodsParticipants were recruited to the Mood Memos study, an online preventive depression intervention, purely through Internet-based sources. The study was targeted to adults with subthreshold depression symptoms from several English-speaking countries. A variety of online recruitment sources were trialed, including search engine advertising (Google, Yahoo!, Bing), Facebook advertising, posts in forums and online noticeboards, and promotion through relevant websites and email newsletters of mental health organizations. ResultsThe study website received visits from 94,808 individuals over the 14-month recruitment period. The recruitment target was reached with 1699 individuals signing up to the randomized controlled trial and 1326 fully enrolling. Most visitors arrived via Google advertising, which promoted a depression-screening questionnaire. Google advertising accounted for nearly half of the total participants who signed up to the study, at an average cost of AUD $12 per participant. Promoting the study through trustworthy organizations and websites known to participants was also effective. Recruitment techniques that were less effective were contacting forums, email groups, and community noticeboards. ConclusionsSeveral techniques, including Google advertising, were successful in recruiting participants to a trial evaluating an online depression intervention. Results suggest that Internet-based recruitment to mental health interventions is feasible and can be relatively affordable. Trial RegistrationACTRN12609000925246
url http://www.jmir.org/2013/2/e31/
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