hiv阳性妇女在研究中的招募:讨论障碍、促进因素和研究人员的知识。

The Open AIDS Journal Pub Date : 2014-12-19 eCollection Date: 2014-01-01 DOI:10.2174/1874613601408010058
Mona R Loutfy, Logan Kennedy V, Saira Mohammed, Wei Wu, Marvelous Muchenje, Khatundi Masinde, Khaled Salam, Lena Soje, Sandra Gregorovich, Wangari Tharao
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引用次数: 24

摘要

背景:历史上妇女在艾滋病研究中的代表性不足,部分原因是招募策略无效。目的:通过一项全省范围内的横断面研究,提高对hiv阳性妇女招募的现有认识。方法:通过电子邮件向所有招募参与者的网站协调员发送调查问卷,该研究涉及居住在加拿大安大略省的490名hiv阳性妇女。调查包括关于重要的招聘障碍和成功的问题。定量数据随后在研究人员和团队成员的广泛知识背景下进行。结果:89%的现场协调员(34/38)完成了调查,98%(31/34)是女性。确定的排名最高的招聘障碍是:研究主题的敏感性(59%),时间/可用性限制(59%),语言障碍(53%),艾滋病毒披露/耻辱问题(47%),研究人员缺乏信任(41%),对研究的恐惧(41%)以及儿童保育和交通不便(41%)。受访者认为招聘最重要的个人属性是研究人员,他们尊重(97%),熟练(91%),灵活(88%),善解人意(88%),并具有良好的沟通能力(88%)。确定的最成功的招聘策略是:通过移情关系(100%)促进建立牢固的融洽关系(88%),承认研究主题的敏感性(94%),提供现金经济补偿(88%),以及制定女性独特的招聘策略(88%)。结论:在研究中招募hiv阳性妇女所需的方法存在差异。为了成功招募艾滋病毒阳性妇女,研究人员和研究参与者之间的密切关系很重要。这种融洽关系是由有尊重、值得信赖、善解人意和灵活的研究人员促进的。针对具体人口的征聘战略对于确保在研究中充分征聘少数群体十分重要,同时对需要特别注意的妇女给予更多的性别考虑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Recruitment of HIV-Positive Women in Research: Discussing Barriers, Facilitators, and Research Personnel's Knowledge.

Recruitment of HIV-Positive Women in Research: Discussing Barriers, Facilitators, and Research Personnel's Knowledge.

Recruitment of HIV-Positive Women in Research: Discussing Barriers, Facilitators, and Research Personnel's Knowledge.

Recruitment of HIV-Positive Women in Research: Discussing Barriers, Facilitators, and Research Personnel's Knowledge.

Background: Women have historically been under-represented in HIV research, partly due to ineffective recruitment strategies.

Objective: To improve the existing understanding of recruitment for HIV-positive women based on a province-wide cross-sectional study.

Methods: A survey was emailed to all site coordinators who recruited participants in a study involving 490 HIV-positive women living in Ontario, Canada. The survey consisted of questions regarding the important recruitment barriers and successes. Quantitative data were then contextualized within extensive knowledge from research personnel and team members.

Results: Completed surveys were received from (89%) site coordinators (34/38) and 98% (31/34) were women. The highest ranked recruitment barriers identified were: sensitivity of the research topic (59%), time/availability constraints (59%), language barriers (53%), HIV disclosure/stigma issues (47%), lack of trust of research personnel (41%), fear of research (41%) and inaccessibility to child care and transportation (41%). The respondents felt that the most important personal attributes for recruitment were research personnel who were respectful (97%), skilled (91%), flexible (88%) and empathetic (88%) and had good communication skills (88%). The most successful recruitment strategies identified were: developing a strong rapport (88%) that was facilitated by an empathetic relationship (100%), acknowledging the sensitive nature of the research topic (94%), providing cash financial compensation (88%), and developing recruitment strategies unique to women (88%).

Conclusion: There are differences in the approaches needed for the recruitment of HIV-positive women in research. For successful recruitment of HIV-positive women, a strong rapport between the research personnel and study participants is important. This rapport is facilitated by having study personnel who are respectful, trustworthy, empathetic, and flexible. Population-specific recruitment strategies are important to ensure adequate recruitment of minority groups in research with greater gender consideration for women requiring specific attention.

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