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      Barriers to medical research participation as perceived by clinical trial investigators: communicating with rural and african american communities.

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          Abstract

          Clinical trials help advance public health and medical research on prevention, diagnosis, screening, treatment, and quality of life. Despite the need for access to quality care in medically underserved areas, clinical trial participation remains low among individuals in rural and African American communities. This study assessed clinical trial research in South Carolina's five main academic medical centers, focusing specifically on clinical trial investigators' perceived barriers to recruitment in the general population and in rural and African American communities. Online survey responses (N = 119) revealed that it was most difficult for investigators to recruit from rural areas and that rural residents were least likely to be represented in medical research, behind both the general public and African Americans. Barriers focusing on communication or awareness proved to be the biggest hurdles to finding potential participants in both the general public and rural communities. Psychological barriers to recruitment were perceived to be most prevalent in African American communities. Study findings provide important insights from the perspective of the clinical trial investigator that will aid in the development of effective communication and education strategies for reaching rural and African American residents with information about clinical trials.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Health Commun
          Journal of health communication
          Informa UK Limited
          1087-0415
          1081-0730
          2015
          : 20
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] a School of Journalism and Mass Communications , University of South Carolina , Columbia , South Carolina , USA.
          Article
          10.1080/10810730.2014.908985
          25204763
          f73fadd6-8bfb-43b2-bf9b-1fa90a800842
          History

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