Barriers to recruitment in pediatric obesity trials: Comparing opt-in and opt-out recruitment approaches

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Abstract

Objective To compare the efficacy of opt-in versus opt-out recruitment methods in pediatric weight management clinical trials. Methods Recruitment of preschoolers and school-age children across two obesity randomized controlled trials (RCTs) were compared using the same optin recruitment approach (parents contact researchers in response to mailings). Opt-in and opt-out strategies (parents send decline postcard in response to mailings if they do not want to participate) were then compared across two preschool obesity RCTs. Results Opt-in strategies yielded a significantly lower overall recruitment rate among preschoolers compared with school-age children. Among preschoolers, an opt-out strategy demonstrated a significantly higher overall recruitment rate compared with an opt-in strategy with the main advantage in the number of families initially contacted. Conclusions Opt-out recruitment strategies may be more effective in overcoming the barriers of recruitment in the preschool age-group because it does not rely on parent recognition of obesity.

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McCullough, M. B., Janicke, D., Stough, C. O., Robson, S., Bolling, C., Zion, C., & Stark, L. (2017). Barriers to recruitment in pediatric obesity trials: Comparing opt-in and opt-out recruitment approaches. Journal of Pediatric Psychology, 42(2), 174–185. https://doi.org/10.1093/jpepsy/jsw054

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