Périodique
What does it take to retain substance-abusing adolescents in research protocols ? Delineation of effort required, strategies undertaken, costs incurred, and 6-month post-treatment differences by retention difficulty
(Comment garder les adolescents toxicomanes dans les protocoles de recherche ? Analyse des conditions, des stratégies, des coûts et des difficultés de rétention 6 mois après la fin du traitement)
Auteur(s) :
MEYERS, K. ;
WEBB, A. ;
FRANTZ J. ;
RANDALL, M.
Année
2003
Page(s) :
73-85
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Refs biblio. :
28
Domaine :
Drogues illicites / Illicit drugs
Thésaurus mots-clés
ADOLESCENT
;
PRISE EN CHARGE
;
THERAPIE COMPORTEMENTALE
;
SUIVI DU PATIENT
;
INTERVIEW
;
RETENTION
;
DEVENIR
Note générale :
Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 2003, 69, (1), 73-85
Note de contenu :
tabl.
Résumé :
ENGLISH :
iResearch retention rates vary widely due to practical difficulties that can be exacerbated when participants are minors. This article describes: (1) the range of effort required and type of follow-up strategies used to complete face-to-face follow-up interviews with substance-abusing adolescent research participants; (2) common locations of follow-up interviews; and (3) characteristics of difficult- versus easy-to-retain adolescent participants. Diverse contact strategies and numerous contact attempts were needed to obtain a 94% 1-month and 92% 6-month retention rate among substance-abusing adolescent research participants. About half of the youth did not respond to basic telephone tracking and required enhanced tracking efforts. Approximately 40% of the youth required 6 or more contacts prior to interview completion. The majority of follow-up interviews (60%) were conducted in community settings such as fast food restaurants, constituting the adolescent's preferred interview location. Telephone interviews were infrequent since adolescents wanted privacy and were concerned that a household member would listen to their answers. Those youth proving difficult-to-retain were significantly more likely to report serious problem behavior and poorer outcomes 6-months post-treatment within the alcohol/drug, juvenile justice, family, and educational domains. It was estimated that an additional $85 per participant per follow-up wave (over and above project budgets) was needed to adequately track, locate and interview an adolescent research participant. This expenditure appears reasonable to ensure a reliable/valid data set. Assessing the cost/benefit of different methods used in preventing attrition, identifying the minimum standards that avoid response bias and examining the impact of interviewer/ participant alliances on data reliability/validity is discussed. (Review's abstract.)
Affiliation :
Univ. PA Sch. Med., Dept. Psychiatr., Ctr. Stud. Addict., Philadelphia, PA 19104
Etats-Unis. United States.
Etats-Unis. United States.
Historique