Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol, Canynge Hall, 39 Whatley Road, Bristol, BS8 2PS, UK.
Qualitative Research Lead, Health Technology Assessment Unit, Department of Community Health Sciences, O'Brien Institute for Public Health, University of Calgary, 3280 Hospital Dr NW, Calgary, AB, T2N 4Z6, Canada.
BMC Med Ethics. 2021 Jun 24;22(1):77. doi: 10.1186/s12910-021-00648-w.
Engagement is important within cohort studies for a number of reasons. It is argued that engaging participants within the studies they are involved in may promote their recruitment and retention within the studies. Participant input can also improve study designs, make them more acceptable for uptake by participants and aid in contextualising research communication to participants. Ultimately it is also argued that engagement needs to provide an avenue for participants to feedback to the cohort study and that this is an ethical imperative. This study sought to explore the participants' experiences and thoughts of their engagement with their birth cohort study.
Participants were recruited from the Children of the 90s (CO90s) study. Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with 42 participants. The interviews were transcribed verbatim, and uploaded onto Nvivo software. They were then analysed via thematic analysis with a constant comparison technique.
Participants' experiences of their engagement with CO90s were broadly based on three aspects: communication they received from CO90s, experiences of ethical conduct from CO90s and receiving rewards from CO90s. The communication received from CO90s, ranged from newsletters explaining study findings and future studies, to more personal forms like annual greeting cards posted to each participant. Ethical conduct from CO90s mainly involved participants understanding that CO90s would keep their information confidential, that it was only involved in 'good' ethical research and their expectation that CO90s would always prioritise participant welfare. Some of the gifts participants said they received at CO90s included toys, shopping vouchers, results from clinical tests, and time off from school to attend data collection (Focus) days. Participants also described a temporality in their engagement with CO90s and the subsequent trust they had developed for the cohort study.
The experiences of engagement described by participants were theorized as being based on reciprocity which was sometimes overt and other times more nuanced. We further provide empirical evidence of participants' expectation for a reciprocal interaction with their cohort study while highlighting the trust that such an interaction fosters. Our study therefore provides key insights for other cohort studies on what participants value in their interactions with their cohort studies.
在多项原因下,参与对于队列研究非常重要。有观点认为,让参与者参与到他们所参与的研究中,可以促进他们在研究中的招募和保留。参与者的投入也可以改进研究设计,使研究更能被参与者接受,并有助于将研究信息传递给参与者。最终,也有人认为,参与需要为参与者提供一个向队列研究反馈的途径,这是一种道德要求。本研究旨在探讨参与者对其参与出生队列研究的体验和想法。
参与者是从儿童 90 年代(CO90s)研究中招募的。对 42 名参与者进行了定性半结构式访谈。访谈内容逐字记录下来,并上传到 Nvivo 软件中。然后,通过主题分析和恒定性比较技术对其进行分析。
参与者对 CO90s 的参与体验主要基于三个方面:他们从 CO90s 收到的信息、从 CO90s 获得的道德行为经验和从 CO90s 获得的奖励。从 CO90s 收到的信息,从解释研究结果和未来研究的通讯,到更个人化的形式,如寄给每个参与者的年度贺卡不等。CO90s 的道德行为主要涉及参与者了解 CO90s 将保密他们的信息、CO90s 只参与“好”的道德研究,以及他们期望 CO90s 将始终优先考虑参与者的福利。参与者提到他们在 CO90s 收到的一些礼物包括玩具、购物券、临床测试结果以及请假参加数据收集(焦点)日。参与者还描述了他们与 CO90s 的参与是有时是明显的,有时是更微妙的互惠关系。
参与者所描述的参与体验被理论化为基于互惠,有时是明显的,有时则更微妙。我们进一步提供了参与者对与他们的队列研究进行互动的期望的实证证据,同时强调了这种互动所培养的信任。因此,我们的研究为其他队列研究提供了关键的见解,了解参与者在与他们的队列研究互动中看重什么。