Introduction: Barriers to recruitment for dementia studies are well documented. As part of the UK government's Dementia 2020 strategy, a nationally consistent system to increase public engagement and participation in research was launched in February 2015. Methods: We describe the development of the “Join Dementia Research” registry, including evolution of policy, involvement of people with dementia in co-production, data requirements, governance, technology, and the impact on study recruitment and what factors may have contributed to the services success. Results: The UK-wide online, telephone, and postal service has registered 47,071 volunteers, with 33,139 people (67.9% of all volunteers) taking part in 378 studies, with 49,954 total study enrolments. This has taken place across 295 research sites, involved 1522 researchers, and resulted in 134 peer-reviewed publications. Discussion: Public registries of individuals interested in research, with user-provided data enabling basic phenotyping, are effective at increasing public engagement with research and removing barriers to study recruitment. Deeper pheno/genotyping could be undertaken to improve matching, but how and when that information is collected will be a key factor.
CITATION STYLE
Kotting, P., Smith, A., O’Hare, M. B., Giebel, C., Mendis, L., Shaw, C., … Rossor, M. N. (2021). A national open-access research registry to improve recruitment to clinical studies. Alzheimer’s and Dementia: Translational Research and Clinical Interventions, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1002/trc2.12221
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