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Published in: Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings 1/2013

01-03-2013

Recruiting Young Adult Cancer Survivors for Behavioral Research

Authors: Carolyn Rabin, Santina Horowitz, Bess Marcus

Published in: Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings | Issue 1/2013

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Abstract

Young adults have been dramatically underrepresented in cancer survivorship research. One contributing factor is the difficulty recruiting this population. To identify effective recruitment strategies, the current study assessed the yield of strategies used to recruit young survivors for an exercise intervention including: clinic-based recruitment, recruitment at cancer-related events, mailings, telephone-based recruitment, advertising on the internet, radio, television and social networking media, distributing brochures and word-of-mouth referrals. When taking into account the strategies for which we could track the number of survivors approached, recruitment at an oncology clinic was the most productive: 38 % of those approached were screened and 8 % enrolled. When evaluating which strategy yielded the greatest percentage of the sample, however, mailings were the most productive. Given widespread use of the internet and social networking by young adults, investigators should also consider these low-cost recruitment strategies.
Footnotes
1
Note that another exercise intervention study with cancer survivors also screened 58 % of the survivors contacted (Matthews et al., 2007).
 
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Metadata
Title
Recruiting Young Adult Cancer Survivors for Behavioral Research
Authors
Carolyn Rabin
Santina Horowitz
Bess Marcus
Publication date
01-03-2013
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings / Issue 1/2013
Print ISSN: 1068-9583
Electronic ISSN: 1573-3572
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10880-012-9317-0

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