Enhancing recruitment and retention strategies in human tobacco research
Laraib Mazhar, Nicolle Krebs, Sophia I. Allen, Andrea L. Hobkirk, Matthew Carrillo, Craig Livelsberger, Vicki Peters, Jonathan Foulds, Jessica M. Yingst

TL;DR
This study explores what motivates tobacco users to participate in research and identifies barriers like work schedules and compensation expectations.
Contribution
The study provides insights into participant motivations and barriers in tobacco research, emphasizing compensation and scheduling as key factors.
Findings
Most participants wanted to quit or reduce tobacco use as a primary motivation for joining research.
Compensation was seen as important by two-thirds of participants, with younger individuals valuing higher compensation more.
Work schedule conflicts were the most common barriers to participation.
Abstract
Recruitment and retention of study participants in tobacco research studies is challenging, and many studies are not able to meet desired sample sizes, particularly since the COVID-19 pandemic. This survey study explored tobacco users’ motivations and expectations when considering participation in tobacco research and identifies common barriers to participation. Participants were adult (21+) tobacco users recruited from a registry of potential research participants. In 2023, participants were emailed a survey to ascertain their motivations for participating in tobacco and health research, their expectations for participation, including compensation and barriers to participating. Means, medians, and proportions were calculated to describe the study population and outcomes. A binary variable for compensation importance was created and analyzed using logistic regression adjusting for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics in Clinical Research · Smoking Behavior and Cessation · Health, Environment, Cognitive Aging
