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Comparative Study
. 2014 Mar;31(3):258-67.
doi: 10.1002/da.22153. Epub 2013 Aug 19.

Enhancing Hispanic participation in mental health clinical research: development of a Spanish-speaking depression research site

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Enhancing Hispanic participation in mental health clinical research: development of a Spanish-speaking depression research site

Vivianne Aponte-Rivera et al. Depress Anxiety. 2014 Mar.

Abstract

Background: Hispanics, particularly those with limited English proficiency, are underrepresented in psychiatric clinical research studies. We developed a bilingual and bicultural research clinic dedicated to the recruitment and treatment of Spanish-speaking subjects in the Predictors of Remission in Depression to Individual and Combined Treatments (PReDICT) study, a large clinical trial of treatment-naïve subjects with major depressive disorder (MDD).

Methods: Demographic and clinical data derived from screening evaluations of the first 1,174 subjects presenting for participation were compared between the Spanish-speaking site (N = 275) and the primary English-speaking site (N = 899). Reasons for ineligibility (N = 888) for the PReDICT study were tallied for each site.

Results: Compared to English speakers, Spanish speakers had a lower level of education and were more likely to be female, uninsured, and have uncontrolled medical conditions. Clinically, Spanish speakers demonstrated greater depression severity, with higher mean symptom severity scores, and a greater number of previous suicide attempts. Among the subjects who were not randomized into the PReDICT study, Spanish-speaking subjects were more likely to have an uncontrolled medical condition or refuse participation, whereas English-speaking subjects were more likely to have bipolar disorder or a non-MDD depressive disorder.

Conclusion: Recruitment of Hispanic subjects with MDD is feasible and may enhance efforts at signal detection, given the higher severity of depression among Spanish-speaking participants presenting for clinical trials. Specific approaches for the recruitment and retention of Spanish-speaking participants are required.

Keywords: Hispanic Americans; culture; major depressive disorder; minority groups; research subject recruitment.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest:

Dr. Aponte-Rivera has salary support through an NIMH grant. Dr. Dunlop reports salary support through an NIMH K-23 award as well as grants from Forest Pharmaceuticals, Pfizer, Bristol-Myers Squibb and Glaxo Smith Kline. He is a paid consultant for Medavante, Pfizer, Roche and Bristol-Myers Squibb. Drs. Ramirez and Kelley have salary support through an NIMH grant. Rebecca Schneider, Beatriz Blastos and Jacqueline Larson have no financial interests to disclose. Dr. Mercado has salary support through an NIH grant. She also paid by the National Dairy Council for lectures, development of educational presentations and travel for such activities. Dr. Mayberg is the PI for two NIMH grants. She is a paid consultant for St. Jude Medical, Inc. and provides expert testimony through the Department of Justice. She is paid by various academic institutions for lectures, including speaker bureaus and grand rounds, and related travel accommodations. Dr. Mayberg has a patent with St. Jude Medical, Inc for an investigational product related to deep brain stimulation for depression. Dr. Craighead is the PI for an NIMH grant and has also received grants from the Realan Foundation and the Brock Family Foundation. Eli Lilly and Forest Pharmaceuticals have provided the medications used in Dr. Craighead’s NIMH grant. He is a paid board member of the George West Mental Health Foundation and receives book royalties from John Wiley and Sons. Dr. Craighead has been a paid lecturer for the World Psychiatry Association and the Icelandic Association for Cognitive and Behavioral Therapies.

References

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