Willingness to participate in clinical trials among patients of Chinese heritage: a meta-synthesis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Subjects of Chinese heritage have been found to participate in clinical
research at lower rates than other groups despite growing in numbers as a population.
While much research has examined research participants' motivation, there has not
been a comprehensive synthesis of this information with respect to participants of
Chinese descent. We sought to identify the factors that promote and hinder participation
in clinical research among participants of Chinese heritage. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL
FINDINGS: We conducted a systematic review of the literature in Pubmed, OpenJGATE,
SCIRUS, and COCHRANE databases and performed a meta-synthesis of retrieved articles.
We extracted qualitative data, such as quotes to identify emerging themes. We identified
five studies that met our selection criteria. Of them, only one (1/5) was conducted
in China while other studies involved Chinese emigrants in USA (3/5) and Singapore
(1/5). Participants from China were similar to emigrants with regard to factors that
either promoted or decreased research participation. Four studies reported data exclusively
on Chinese subjects. Three of the five studies involved qualitative interviews while
the others were conducted using a survey design. Six themes favoring research participation
were identified: Personal Benefit to Participants, Financial Incentives, Participant
Sense of Altruism, Family or Physician Recommendations, Advertisements, and Convenience
to the Participant. Five factors were seen as a barrier to participation in clinical
trials: Mistrust of Researchers, Language Barrier, Lack of Financial and Other Support,
Cultural and Social Barriers, Lack of Knowledge about Clinical Trials. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:
Chinese heritage clinical research participants value personal benefit, financial
incentives, the ability to help others, recommendations of others, advertisements,
and convenience when considering clinical research participation. In addition, the
establishment of trust and addressing knowledge deficits are important factors to
them. Investigators seeking to optimize enrolment in these populations should incorporate
these findings into their study design and subject handouts.
Type
Journal articleSubject
HumansAttitude to Health
Language
Social Behavior
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
Advertising as Topic
Clinical Trials as Topic
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/16689Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1371/journal.pone.0051328Publication Info
Limkakeng, Alexander; Phadtare, Amruta; Shah, Jatin; Vaghasia, Meenakshi; Wei, Ding
Ying; Shah, Anand; & Pietrobon, Ricardo (2013). Willingness to participate in clinical trials among patients of Chinese heritage:
a meta-synthesis. PloS one, 8(1). 10.1371/journal.pone.0051328. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/16689.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Alexander Tan Limkakeng Jr.
Professor of Emergency Medicine
My personal research interest is finding new ways to diagnose acute coronary syndrome.
In particular, I am interested in novel biomarkers and precision medicine approaches
to this problem. I also have an interest in sepsis and empirical bioethics. As Vice
Chair of Clinical Research for the Duke University Department of Emergency Medicine,
I also work with researchers from many fields spanning global health, innovation,
clinical trials, basic discovery, and trans

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