The Community Engaged Digital Alzheimer's Research (CEDAR) Study: A Digital Intervention to Increase Research Participation of Black American Participants in the Brain Health Registry.
M R Mindt, M T Ashford, D Zhu, H Cham, A Aaronson, C Conti, X Deng, R Alaniz, J Sorce, C Cypress, P Griffin, D Flenniken, M Camacho, J Fockler, D Truran, R S Mackin, C Hill, M W Weiner, D Byrd, R W Turner Ii, R L Nosheny
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Although Black/African American older adults bear significant inequities in prevalence, incidence, and outcomes of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias, they are profoundly under-included in Alzheimer's Disease research. Community-Engaged Research (e.g., equitable community/science partnerships) is an evidence-based approach for improving engagement of underrepresented populations into Alzheimer's Disease research, but has lacked scalability to the national level. As internet use among older adults from underrepresented populations continues to grow, internet-based research shows promise as a feasible, valid approach to engagement and longitudinal assessment. The Community Engaged Digital Alzheimer's Research (CEDAR) study utilizes a community-engaged research approach to increase the engagement and research participation of Black/African American adults in the Brain Health Registry (BHR) and Alzheimer Disease clinical research.
Objectives: To describe the methods and evaluate the feasibility of the CEDAR culturally-informed digital platform within BHR.
Design: All Black/African American participants in BHR were invited to enroll in CEDAR and to consider serving on a newly convened Community-Scientific Partnership Board to guide the study. The community board guided the development a culturally-informed cadre of engagement materials and strategies to increase research participation. Engagement strategies included incentives for study task completion, culturally-informed communications (e.g., landing page, emails and social media), resources about brain health, and video and written testimonials by CEDAR participants.
Setting: BHR, an Internet-based registry and cohort.
Participants: BHR participants self-identifying as Black/African American were invited to enroll. All participants who signed an online informed consent document were enrolled.
Measurements: We report the number of participants invited, enrolled, completed tasks, and volunteered to join the community board. We compared the demographics, cognitive profile, and baseline BHR task completion rates between CEDAR participants and all those invited to join the study.
Results: Of 3738 invited, 349 (9.34%) enrolled in CEDAR. 134 (37% of CEDAR participants) volunteered to join the community board, of which 19 were selected for the community board. Compared to those invited, the CEDAR cohort had a higher percentage of female participants (84.5%) and a lower percentage of participants who identify as belonging to more than one ethnocultural group (21.8%). Compared to those did not enroll in CEDAR, those enrolled in CEDAR had a higher percentage of participants completing all BHR tasks (22%) and a higher percentage of participants completing at least one cognitive test (76%). Those enrolled in CEDAR also had a higher percentage of participants having an enrolled study partner (18%).
Conclusions: A culturally-informed Community-Engaged Research approach, including a remotely-convened community board, to engagement of Black/African American participants in an online research registry is feasible. This approach can be adapted for use in various clinical studies and other settings. Future studies will evaluate the effectiveness of the engagement strategies.
背景:尽管美国黑人/非洲裔老年人在阿尔茨海默病及相关痴呆症的患病率、发病率和结果方面存在严重的不平等,但他们在阿尔茨海默病研究中的参与度却远远不够。社区参与式研究(如公平的社区/科学合作伙伴关系)是一种基于证据的方法,可提高代表性不足人群参与阿尔茨海默病研究的程度,但在全国范围内缺乏可扩展性。随着来自代表性不足人群的老年人使用互联网的人数不断增加,基于互联网的研究有望成为一种可行、有效的参与和纵向评估方法。社区参与的数字阿尔茨海默氏症研究(CEDAR)利用社区参与的研究方法来提高黑人/非裔美国成年人在脑健康登记(BHR)和阿尔茨海默氏症临床研究中的参与度和研究参与度:描述 CEDAR 方法并评估 BHR 中以文化为基础的数字平台的可行性:设计:邀请BHR的所有黑人/非裔美国人参与者加入CEDAR,并考虑加入新成立的社区-科学合作委员会,以指导该研究。社区委员会指导开发了一批有文化背景的参与材料和策略,以提高研究参与度。参与策略包括对完成研究任务的奖励、有文化背景的交流(如登陆页面、电子邮件和社交媒体)、有关大脑健康的资源以及 CEDAR 参与者的视频和书面感言:BHR 是一个基于互联网的登记和队列:邀请自称为黑人/非裔美国人的 BHR 参与者参加。所有签署了在线知情同意书的参与者都被纳入其中:我们报告了受邀、注册、完成任务和自愿加入社区委员会的参与者人数。我们比较了 CEDAR 参与者和所有受邀参加研究者的人口统计学、认知概况和基线 BHR 任务完成率:在3738名受邀者中,有349人(9.34%)加入了CEDAR。134人(占CEDAR参与者的37%)自愿加入社区委员会,其中19人被选入社区委员会。与受邀者相比,CEDAR 的参与者中女性比例较高(84.5%),自认为属于一个以上种族文化群体的参与者比例较低(21.8%)。与未参加 CEDAR 的参与者相比,参加 CEDAR 的参与者完成所有 BHR 任务的比例更高(22%),完成至少一项认知测试的比例更高(76%)。参加 CEDAR 的参与者中,有研究伙伴的比例也更高(18%):结论:采用文化信息社区参与研究的方法,包括远程召集社区委员会,让黑人/非裔美国人参与者参与在线研究注册是可行的。这种方法可用于各种临床研究和其他场合。未来的研究将评估参与策略的有效性。
期刊介绍:
The JPAD « Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer’Disease » will publish reviews, original research articles and short reports to improve our knowledge in the field of Alzheimer prevention including : neurosciences, biomarkers, imaging, epidemiology, public health, physical cognitive exercise, nutrition, risk and protective factors, drug development, trials design, and heath economic outcomes.
JPAD will publish also the meeting abstracts from Clinical Trial on Alzheimer Disease (CTAD) and will be distributed both in paper and online version worldwide.