首页> 外文期刊>Annals of Emergency Medicine: Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians and the University Association for Emergency Medicine >Challenges in Enrollment of Minority, Pediatric, and Geriatric Patients in Emergency and Acute Care Clinical Research
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Challenges in Enrollment of Minority, Pediatric, and Geriatric Patients in Emergency and Acute Care Clinical Research

机译:急诊和急诊临床研究中少数民族,小儿和老年患者招募面临的挑战

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Study objective: Emergency department (ED) -based clinical research has the potential to include patient populations that are typically underrepresented in clinical research. The objective of this study is to assess how emergency clinical care and research processes, informed consent, and patient demographic factors (age, sex, and ethnicity/race) affect enrollment and consent in clinical research in the ED. Methods: This was an analysis of prospectively collected data of all patients (aged 2 to 101 years) eligible for one of 7 clinical research studies from February 2005 to April 2007 in an academic ED, We measured rates of enrollment and consent in the clinical studies. Results: One thousand two hundred two of the 4418 patients screened for participation in 7 clinical studies were clinically eligible for enrollment. Of the 868 patients who were able to provide a voluntary decision regarding consent, 639 (73.6%) agreed to participate; an overall enrollment rate of 53.2%. The mean age of patients enrolled was 51.8 years (range 3 to 98 years). Black patients (49.2% enrollment) and Latino patients (18.4% enrollment) were less likely to be enrolled in comparison with white patients (58.3% enrollment) (adjusted odds ratio [OR] of enrollment for blacks=0.64; 95% confidence interval [Cl] 0.50 to 0.82; adjusted OR of enrollment for Latinos=O.16; 95% Cl 0.08 to 0.33). Enrollment rates were lower among pediatric (40.0%) and geriatric patients (49.1%) in comparison with adult patients ages 18 to 64 years (55.5%) (adjusted OR of enrollment for pediatric patients=0.70, 95% Cl 0.34 to 1.43; adjusted OR of enrollment for geriatric patients=0.69, 95% Ci 0.53 to 0.90). Unique issues contributing to underenrollment included challenges in consent among pediatric and elderly patients, language issues in Latino patients, reduced voluntary consent rates among black patients, and perhaps underuse of minimal risk waivers. Conclusion: in a large academic ED, minority, pediatric, and geriatric patients were less likely to be enrolled in acute care clinical research studies than middle-aged whites. Enrollment and consent strategies designed to enhance research participation in these important patient populations may be necessary to address disparities in the development and application of evidence-based emergency and acute care. [Ann Emerg Med. 2008;51:775-780
机译:研究目标:基于急诊科(ED)的临床研究有可能纳入通常在临床研究中代表性不足的患者人群。这项研究的目的是评估急诊临床护理和研究过程,知情同意和患者人口统计学因素(年龄,性别和种族/种族)如何影响急诊室临床研究的入组和同意。方法:这是一项对2005年2月至2007年4月在学术性ED中符合7项临床研究之一的所有患者(2至101岁)的前瞻性收集数据的分析,我们测量了该临床研究的入组率和同意率。结果:筛查参与了7项临床研究的4418例患者中的1202例临床上符合入组条件。在868名能够自愿同意的患者中,有639名(73.6%)同意参加。整体入学率为53.2%。入组患者的平均年龄为51.8岁(3至98岁)。与白人(58.3%的入学率)相比,黑人(49.2%的入学率)和拉丁裔(18.4%的入学率)可能性较小(黑人入学率的调整后比值[O​​R] = 0.64;置信区间为95%[ Cl]为0.50至0.82;针对拉丁裔的入学调整后OR = O.16; 95%Cl为0.08至0.33)。与18岁至64岁的成年患者(55.5%)相比,儿科(40.0%)和老年患者(49.1%)的入学率较低(儿科患者入学校正后OR为0.70,95%Cl为0.34至1.43;校正后)老年患者的入组OR = 0.69,95%CI 0.53至0.90)。导致入学人数不足的独特问题包括小儿和老年患者的同意问题,拉丁裔患者的语言问题,黑人患者的自愿同意率降低,以及可能未充分利用最低风险豁免。结论:在大型学术性ED中,与中年白人相比,少数族裔,儿科和老年患者参加急诊临床研究的可能性较小。为了解决在基于证据的急诊和急诊服务的开发和应用方面的差异,可能需要采用旨在增强研究在这些重要患者人群中的参与度的入组和同意策略。 [安·埃默格医学杂志。 2008; 51:775-780

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