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Home > Modifiable Barriers for Recruitment and Retention of Older Adults Participants from Underrepresented Minorities in Alzheimer's Disease Research.

TitleModifiable Barriers for Recruitment and Retention of Older Adults Participants from Underrepresented Minorities in Alzheimer's Disease Research.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsIndorewalla, KK, O'Connor, MK, Budson, AE, DiTerlizzi, CGuess, Jackson, J
JournalJ Alzheimers Dis
Volume80
Issue3
Pagination927-940
Date Published2021
ISSN1875-8908
KeywordsAlzheimer Disease, Clinical Trials as Topic, Humans, Minority Groups, Patient Selection
Abstract

Clinical Alzheimer's disease (AD) trials currently face a critical shortfall of thousands of eligible participants, which inflates the duration and cost of the clinical study as well as threatens the scientific merit of promising clinical interventions. This recruitment crisis is further compounded by the fact that underrepresented and marginalized populations-particularly those identifying as a racial or ethnic minority, those with low socioeconomic status, or living in rural areas-have been historically underrepresented in ongoing AD clinical trials despite overwhelming evidence that such populations are at increased risk for developing dementia. As a result of various recruitment barriers, current AD clinical studies frequently reflect a decreasingly representative segment of the US population, which threatens the overall generalizability of these findings. The current narrative review provides an updated examination and critique of common recruitment barriers and potential solutions, as well as a discussion of theoretical approaches that may address barriers disproportionately experienced by underrepresented communities. AD clinical researchers are encouraged to take purposive action aimed at increasing diversity of enrolled AD clinical trial cohorts by actively identifying and quantifying barriers to research participation-especially recruitment barriers and health disparities that disproportionately prevent underrepresented and marginalized populations from participating in research. Furthermore, researchers are encouraged to closely track which individuals who express interest in AD research ultimately enroll in research studies to examine whether AD research participation is appropriately representative of the intended population for whom these new and novel AD interventions are being designed.

DOI10.3233/JAD-201081
Alternate JournalJ Alzheimers Dis
PubMed ID33612540
PubMed Central IDPMC8150544
Grant ListDP1 AG069873 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States
P30 AG013846 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States
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Source URL: https://www.j-alz.com/content/modifiable-barriers-recruitment-and-retention-older-adults-participants-underrepresented