Strategies for Identifying and Recruiting Women at High Risk for Breast Cancer for Research Outside of Clinical Settings: Observational Study
Claire C Conley, Jennifer D Rodriguez, McKenzie McIntyre, Bethany L Niell, Suzanne C O'Neill, Susan T Vadaparampil

TL;DR
This study explores effective ways to recruit women at high risk for breast cancer for research outside of clinical settings.
Contribution
The study evaluates multiple recruitment strategies and their effectiveness in reaching high-risk women for breast cancer research.
Findings
Facebook ads and ResearchMatch were the most common recruitment sources.
Community partner promotions had the highest proportion of eligible respondents.
Word of mouth was the most cost-effective recruitment method.
Abstract
Research is needed to understand and address barriers to risk management for women at high (≥20% lifetime) risk for breast cancer, but recruiting this population for research studies is challenging. This paper compares a variety of recruitment strategies used for a cross-sectional, observational study of high-risk women. Eligible participants were assigned female at birth, aged 25-85 years, English-speaking, living in the United States, and at high risk for breast cancer as defined by the American College of Radiology. Individuals were excluded if they had a personal history of breast cancer, prior bilateral mastectomy, medical contraindications for magnetic resonance imaging, or were not up-to-date on screening mammography per American College of Radiology guidelines. Participants were recruited from August 2020 to January 2021 using the following mechanisms: targeted Facebook…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSocial Media in Health Education · Global Cancer Incidence and Screening · Patient-Provider Communication in Healthcare
