Abstract

BackgroundThe development of evidence-based care geared towards Black and Latina women living with uncontrolled type 2 diabetes is contingent upon their active recruitment into clinical interventions. Well-documented impediments to recruitment include a historical mistrust of the research community and socioeconomic factors that limit awareness and access to research studies. Although sociocultural and socioeconomic factors deter minorities from participating in clinical research, it is equally important to consider the role of stigma in chronic disease intervention studies.ObjectiveWe aim to share our discovery of diabetes-related stigma as an underrecognized impediment to recruitment for the Women in Control 2.0 virtual diabetes self-management education study.MethodsOur initial recruitment plan used traditional strategies to recruit minority women with uncontrolled type 2 diabetes, which included letters and phone calls to targeted patients, referrals from clinicians, and posted flyers. After engaging a patient advisory group and consulting with experts in community advocacy, diabetes-related stigma emerged as a prominent barrier to recruitment. The study team reviewed and revised recruitment scripts and outreach material in order to better align with the lived experience and needs of potential enrollees.ResultsUsing a more nuanced, community-centered recruitment approach, we achieved our target recruitment goal, enrolling 309 participants into the study, exceeding our target of 212.ConclusionsThere is a need for updated recruitment methods that can increase research participation of patients who experience internalized diabetes stigma. To address disparities in minority health, further research is needed to better understand diabetes-related stigma and devise strategies to avert or address it.

Highlights

  • Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) disproportionately impacts racial and ethnic minority communities in the United States [1]. there is a need for research in delivering evidence-based care tailored to a diversity of patients living with diabetes, minority persons represented only 36.1% of individuals enrolled in clinical trials sponsored by the National https://diabetes.jmir.org/2021/2/e26965 XSLFO RenderXJMIR Diabetes 2021 | vol 6 | iss. 2 | e26965 | p. 1Institutes of Health in 2018 [2]

  • There is a need for updated recruitment methods that can increase research participation of patients who experience internalized diabetes stigma

  • There is a need for research in delivering evidence-based care tailored to a diversity of patients living with diabetes, minority persons represented only 36.1% of individuals enrolled in clinical trials sponsored by the National https://diabetes.jmir.org/2021/2/e26965

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Summary

Introduction

Well-documented impediments to recruitment of minorities for research trials are linked to socioeconomic factors and mistrust of the research community stemming from structural racism [3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. Included in this viewpoint is the experience of diabetes-related stigma among minority populations as a barrier to recruitment. Well-documented impediments to recruitment include a historical mistrust of the research community and socioeconomic factors that limit awareness and access to research studies. Sociocultural and socioeconomic factors deter minorities from participating in clinical research, it is important to consider the role of stigma in chronic disease intervention studies

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