Using Vignette-Based Methodology to Examine Study Recruitment in Older African American Adults: A Methods Paper
- PMID: 34322834
- PMCID: PMC8501170
- DOI: 10.1007/s11524-021-00567-6
Using Vignette-Based Methodology to Examine Study Recruitment in Older African American Adults: A Methods Paper
Abstract
This study's objective was to assess which caring recruitment behaviors correlate with the successful recruitment of older African-American adults-a two-step cross-sectional design employing a vignette-based survey methodology. Kristen Swanson's middle-range theory of caring was used to guide the examination of African-American adults' (65 years of age and older) perceptions of research-study-recruiter recruitment behaviors. This study's main findings are twofold: Step 1: Seven of ten invited experts identified major revisions of the two core vignettes, written at an eighth-grade reading level and high school comprehension. Step 2: A 51% response rate yielded findings that this methodology successfully captured older African-American adults' perception of research study recruiters' behavioral characteristics during the recruitment process. Older African-Americans who received the hypothetical caring vignette were twice as likely to indicate their willingness to enroll in a research study with a high commitment (i.e., brain donation) compared to their counterparts who received the hypothetical uncaring recruitment scenario. Vignette-based survey methodology holds promise as a tool for informing the recruitment of older African-American adults and other minorities into federally funded health-related research studies.
Keywords: African-American; Decision-making; Minority; Older adult; Recruitment; Vignette.
© 2021. The New York Academy of Medicine.
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