Overcoming barriers to recruitment and retention of African–American women with SLE in behavioural interventions: lessons learnt from the WELL study

Background African–Americans are historically under-represented in SLE studies and engaging them in behavioural interventions is challenging. The Women Empowered to Live with Lupus (WELL) study is a trial conducted to examine the effectiveness of the Chronic Disease Self-Management Program (CDSMP) a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S Sam Lim, Gaobin Bao, Cristina Drenkard, Kirk Easley, Charmayne Dunlop-Thomas, Teresa Brady
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2020-12-01
Series:Lupus Science and Medicine
Online Access:https://lupus.bmj.com/content/7/1/e000391.full
id doaj-88360b6e052f478d9c9ee285c895031b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-88360b6e052f478d9c9ee285c895031b2021-01-22T17:00:12ZengBMJ Publishing GroupLupus Science and Medicine2053-87902020-12-017110.1136/lupus-2020-000391Overcoming barriers to recruitment and retention of African–American women with SLE in behavioural interventions: lessons learnt from the WELL studyS Sam Lim0Gaobin Bao1Cristina Drenkard2Kirk Easley3Charmayne Dunlop-Thomas4Teresa Brady5Department of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USADepartment of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USADepartment of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USADepartment of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Emory University Rollins School of Public Health, Atlanta, Georgia, USADepartment of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USAClarity Consulting and Communications, Atlanta, Georgia, USABackground African–Americans are historically under-represented in SLE studies and engaging them in behavioural interventions is challenging. The Women Empowered to Live with Lupus (WELL) study is a trial conducted to examine the effectiveness of the Chronic Disease Self-Management Program (CDSMP) among African–American women with SLE. We describe enrolment and retention challenges and successful strategies of the WELL study.Methods The Georgians Organized Against Lupus (GOAL) cohort, a population-based cohort established in Atlanta, Georgia, was used to enrol a sample of 168 African–American women with SLE into the CDSMP. The CDSMP is a 6-week, group-based programme led by peers to enhance self-management skills in people with chronic conditions. Study performance standards were predefined and close monitoring of recruitment and retention progress was conducted by culturally competent staff members. Continuous contact with participants, research coordinators’ notes and regular research team meetings served to assess barriers and define strategies needed to meet the desired recruitment and retention outcomes.Results While no substantial barriers were identified to enrol GOAL participants into the WELL study, WELL participants faced difficulties registering for and/or completing (attending ≥4 sessions) a CDSMP workshop. Major barriers were unpredicted personal and health-related issues, misunderstanding of the scope and benefits of the intervention, and transportation problems. Early implementation of tailored strategies (eg, CDSMP scheduled on Saturdays, CDSMP delivered at convenient/familiar facilities, transportation services) helped to reduce participant barriers and achieve a CDSMP registration of 168 participants, with 126 (75%) completers. Frequent contact with participants and compensation helped to reach 92.3% retention for the 6-month survey.Conclusions Predefined standards and monitoring of participant barriers by a culturally competent research team and proactive solutions were critical to implementing successful strategies and achieving the desired recruitment and retention outcomes of a behavioural trial involving African–American women with SLE.Trial registration number NCT02988661.https://lupus.bmj.com/content/7/1/e000391.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S Sam Lim
Gaobin Bao
Cristina Drenkard
Kirk Easley
Charmayne Dunlop-Thomas
Teresa Brady
spellingShingle S Sam Lim
Gaobin Bao
Cristina Drenkard
Kirk Easley
Charmayne Dunlop-Thomas
Teresa Brady
Overcoming barriers to recruitment and retention of African–American women with SLE in behavioural interventions: lessons learnt from the WELL study
Lupus Science and Medicine
author_facet S Sam Lim
Gaobin Bao
Cristina Drenkard
Kirk Easley
Charmayne Dunlop-Thomas
Teresa Brady
author_sort S Sam Lim
title Overcoming barriers to recruitment and retention of African–American women with SLE in behavioural interventions: lessons learnt from the WELL study
title_short Overcoming barriers to recruitment and retention of African–American women with SLE in behavioural interventions: lessons learnt from the WELL study
title_full Overcoming barriers to recruitment and retention of African–American women with SLE in behavioural interventions: lessons learnt from the WELL study
title_fullStr Overcoming barriers to recruitment and retention of African–American women with SLE in behavioural interventions: lessons learnt from the WELL study
title_full_unstemmed Overcoming barriers to recruitment and retention of African–American women with SLE in behavioural interventions: lessons learnt from the WELL study
title_sort overcoming barriers to recruitment and retention of african–american women with sle in behavioural interventions: lessons learnt from the well study
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series Lupus Science and Medicine
issn 2053-8790
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Background African–Americans are historically under-represented in SLE studies and engaging them in behavioural interventions is challenging. The Women Empowered to Live with Lupus (WELL) study is a trial conducted to examine the effectiveness of the Chronic Disease Self-Management Program (CDSMP) among African–American women with SLE. We describe enrolment and retention challenges and successful strategies of the WELL study.Methods The Georgians Organized Against Lupus (GOAL) cohort, a population-based cohort established in Atlanta, Georgia, was used to enrol a sample of 168 African–American women with SLE into the CDSMP. The CDSMP is a 6-week, group-based programme led by peers to enhance self-management skills in people with chronic conditions. Study performance standards were predefined and close monitoring of recruitment and retention progress was conducted by culturally competent staff members. Continuous contact with participants, research coordinators’ notes and regular research team meetings served to assess barriers and define strategies needed to meet the desired recruitment and retention outcomes.Results While no substantial barriers were identified to enrol GOAL participants into the WELL study, WELL participants faced difficulties registering for and/or completing (attending ≥4 sessions) a CDSMP workshop. Major barriers were unpredicted personal and health-related issues, misunderstanding of the scope and benefits of the intervention, and transportation problems. Early implementation of tailored strategies (eg, CDSMP scheduled on Saturdays, CDSMP delivered at convenient/familiar facilities, transportation services) helped to reduce participant barriers and achieve a CDSMP registration of 168 participants, with 126 (75%) completers. Frequent contact with participants and compensation helped to reach 92.3% retention for the 6-month survey.Conclusions Predefined standards and monitoring of participant barriers by a culturally competent research team and proactive solutions were critical to implementing successful strategies and achieving the desired recruitment and retention outcomes of a behavioural trial involving African–American women with SLE.Trial registration number NCT02988661.
url https://lupus.bmj.com/content/7/1/e000391.full
work_keys_str_mv AT ssamlim overcomingbarrierstorecruitmentandretentionofafricanamericanwomenwithsleinbehaviouralinterventionslessonslearntfromthewellstudy
AT gaobinbao overcomingbarrierstorecruitmentandretentionofafricanamericanwomenwithsleinbehaviouralinterventionslessonslearntfromthewellstudy
AT cristinadrenkard overcomingbarrierstorecruitmentandretentionofafricanamericanwomenwithsleinbehaviouralinterventionslessonslearntfromthewellstudy
AT kirkeasley overcomingbarrierstorecruitmentandretentionofafricanamericanwomenwithsleinbehaviouralinterventionslessonslearntfromthewellstudy
AT charmaynedunlopthomas overcomingbarrierstorecruitmentandretentionofafricanamericanwomenwithsleinbehaviouralinterventionslessonslearntfromthewellstudy
AT teresabrady overcomingbarrierstorecruitmentandretentionofafricanamericanwomenwithsleinbehaviouralinterventionslessonslearntfromthewellstudy
_version_ 1724327601984503808