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Clinical Trial Participation: A Pilot Study of Patient-Identified Barriers

Mishellene McKinney, Rose Bell, Cindy Samborski, Kristopher Attwood, Grace Dean, Katherine Eakle, Stephen Edge

2021Clinical journal of oncology nursing18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Clinical trial enrollment in the United States is lacking, particularly among older adult and ethnic and racial minority populations. OBJECTIVES: The aim of the current study was to identify patient-related barriers to clinical trial participation using a mixed-methods patient survey and to offer insights to develop evidence-based implementation strategies to address these barriers. METHODS: A retrospective survey was conducted of patients who were not interested in participating in a clinical trial to quantify the reasons these patients chose not to participate. Directed qualitative content analysis was used to identify themes that emerged from the write-in responses. FINDINGS: The greatest patient-reported barriers were misperceptions about placebos, a desire to not feel like a human guinea pig, uncertainty surrounding clinical trial treatment effectiveness compared to standard care, and concerns about additional appointments or tests. Oncology nurses can address patient enrollment barriers by providing targeted education and participating in the informed consent process.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineClinical trialInformed consentFamily medicineMEDLINEPilot trialIntensive care medicineClinical researchEthical issuesAlternative medicineNursingClinical OncologyPatient educationEthics in Clinical ResearchPatient-Provider Communication in HealthcareMental Health and Patient Involvement
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