Abstract
In response to recruitment difficulties experienced by the National Children’s Study, alternatives to the door-to-door recruitment method were pilot tested. This report describes outcomes, successes, and challenges of recruiting women through prenatal care providers in Benton County, Arkansas, USA. Eligible women residing in 14 randomly selected geographic segments were recruited. Data were collected during pregnancy, at birth, and at 3, 6, 9, 12, 18, and 24 months postpartum. Participants were compared to non-enrolled eligible women through birth records. Of 6402 attempts to screen for address eligibility, 468 patients were potentially eligible. Of 221 eligible women approached to participate, 151 (68%) enrolled in the 21-year study. Enrolled women were similar to non-enrolled women in age, marital status, number of prenatal care visits, and gestational age and birth weight of the newborn. Women enrolled from public clinics were more likely to be Hispanic, lower educated, younger and unmarried than those enrolled from private clinics. Sampling geographic areas from historical birth records failed to produce expected equivalent number of births across segments. Enrollment of pregnant women from prenatal care providers was successful.
Highlights
The National Children’s Study (NCS) originated in response to the Children’s Health Act phasized in favor of pregnant women
Women were to be recruited from the offices of prenatal care providers as early in pregnancy as possible
CRIS was developed uniquely for County agreed to participate in the National were pregnant and 4 women were not pregthe Benton County NCS Study Center by the Children’s Study
Summary
The National Children’s Study (NCS) originated in response to the Children’s Health Act phasized in favor of pregnant women. This study proof the effects of the environment on children’s tocol was approved by the Institutional Review health in the United States.[1] The study is intended to generate a nationally representative probability sample of children recruited as early in their lives as possible, preferably during the early stages of pregnancy. As it was originally conceptualized, the NCS would follow a sample of 100,000 children, born to
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