Perceptions about dementia clinical trials among underrepresented populations: A nationally representative survey of U.S. dementia caregivers
Brandon Leggins, Danielle M. Hart, Ashley J. Jackson, Robert W. Levenson, Charles C. Windon, Jennifer Merrilees, Winston Chiong

TL;DR
This study explores why underrepresented groups in the U.S. may not be joining dementia clinical trials, finding that willingness is not the issue but structural barriers might be.
Contribution
The study uses a nationally representative survey to compare dementia caregivers' willingness to participate in clinical trials across racial and ethnic groups.
Findings
Older caregivers are less likely to participate in hypothetical dementia trials.
Perceived social responsibility increases willingness to participate, while concerns about side effects decrease it.
Non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic caregivers are as willing as non-Hispanic White caregivers to join trials.
Abstract
The research community has historically failed to enroll diverse groups of participants in dementia clinical trials. A unique aspect of dementia care research is the requirement of a study partner, who can attest to the care recipient’s clinical and functional capacity. The aim of this study is to assess racial and ethnic differences and the importance of various trial considerations among dementia caregivers, in their decision to participate in clinical research as study partners. We embedded a vignette about a hypothetical dementia clinical trial in a nationally representative survey of U.S. dementia caregivers, oversampling non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic caregivers. Dementia caregivers were asked about their willingness to participate in the trial with their care recipient and rated the importance of nine considerations in hypothetical decisions to participate. Caregiver…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues · Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life · Ethics in Clinical Research
