Recruiting patients to medical research: double blind randomised trial of "opt-in" versus "opt-out" strategies
- PMID: 16157604
- PMCID: PMC1261191
- DOI: 10.1136/bmj.38583.625613.AE
Recruiting patients to medical research: double blind randomised trial of "opt-in" versus "opt-out" strategies
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the effect of opt-in compared with opt-out recruitment strategies on response rate and selection bias.
Design: Double blind randomised controlled trial.
Setting: Two general practices in England.
Participants: 510 patients with angina.
Intervention: Patients were randomly allocated to an opt-in (asked to actively signal willingness to participate in research) or opt-out (contacted repeatedly unless they signalled unwillingness to participate) approach for recruitment to an observational prognostic study of patients with angina.
Main outcome measures: Recruitment rate and clinical characteristics of patients.
Results: The recruitment rate, defined by clinic attendance, was 38% (96/252) in the opt-in arm and 50% (128/258) in the opt-out arm (P = 0.014). Once an appointment had been made, non-attendance at the clinic was similar (20% opt-in arm v 17% opt-out arm; P = 0.86). Patients in the opt-in arm had fewer risk factors (44% v 60%; P = 0.053), less treatment for angina (69% v 82%; P = 0.010), and less functional impairment (9% v 20%; P = 0.023) than patients in the opt-out arm.
Conclusions: The opt-in approach to participant recruitment, increasingly required by ethics committees, resulted in lower response rates and a biased sample. We propose that the opt-out approach should be the default recruitment strategy for studies with low risk to participants.
Comment in
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Are consenters representative of a target population?BMJ. 2005 Nov 5;331(7524):1082-3. doi: 10.1136/bmj.331.7524.1082-c. BMJ. 2005. PMID: 16269502 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
References
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- Sommerville A. What's wrong with opting out? (Commentary). BMJ 2001;322: 1220.
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- Young AF, Dobson AJ, Byles JE. Health services research using linked records: who consents and what is the gain? Aust N Z J Public Health 2001;25: 417-20. - PubMed
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- Woolf SH, Rothermich SF, Johnson RE, Marsland DW. Selection bias from requiring patients to give consent to examine data for health services research. Arch Fam Med 2000;9: 1111-8. - PubMed
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