Abstract

BackgroundRecruiting deaf and hard-of-hearing participants, particularly sign language-users, for genetics health service research is challenging due to communication barriers, mistrust toward genetics, and researchers’ unfamiliarity with deaf people. Feelings of social exclusion and lack of social cohesion between researchers and the Deaf community are factors to consider. Social marketing is effective for recruiting hard-to-reach populations because it fosters social inclusion and cohesion by focusing on the targeted audience’s needs. For the deaf population this includes recognizing their cultural and linguistic diversity, their geography, and their systems for information exchange. Here we use concepts and language from social marketing to evaluate our effectiveness to engage a U.S. deaf population in a prospective, longitudinal genetic counseling and testing study.MethodsThe study design was interpreted in terms of a social marketing mix of Product, Price, Place, and Promotion. Price addressed linguistic diversity by including a variety of communication technologies and certified interpreters to facilitate communication; Place addressed geography by including community-based participation locations; Promotion addressed information exchange by using multiple recruitment strategies. Regression analyses examined the study design’s effectiveness in recruiting a culturally and linguistically diverse sample.Results271 individuals were enrolled, with 66.1% American Sign Language (ASL)-users, 19.9% ASL + English-users, 12.6% English-users. Language was significantly associated with communication technology, participation location, and recruitment. Videophone and interpreters were more likely to be used for communication between ASL-users and researchers while voice telephone and no interpreters were preferred by English-users (Price). ASL-users were more likely to participate in community-based locations while English-users preferred medically-based locations (Place). English-users were more likely to be recruited through mass media (Promotion) while ASL-users were more likely to be recruited through community events and to respond to messaging that emphasized inclusion of a Deaf perspective.ConclusionsThis study design effectively engaged the deaf population, particularly sign language-users. Results suggest that the deaf population’s cultural and linguistic diversity, geography, and forms of information exchange must be taken into account in study designs for successful recruitment. A social marketing approach that incorporates critical social determinants of health provides a novel and important framework for genetics health service research targeting specific, and hard-to-reach, underserved groups.

Highlights

  • Recruiting deaf and hard-of-hearing participants, sign language-users, for genetics health service research is challenging due to communication barriers, mistrust toward genetics, and researchers’ unfamiliarity with deaf people

  • This article evaluates the Deaf Genetics Project’s (DGP) degree of success at motivating a hard-to-reach, underserved population – ranging from culturally Deaf to hard-of-hearing individuals – to participate in a genetic counseling and test study through a social marketing framework that addresses critical social determinants of health: social inclusion and social cohesion

  • Participation rate among those eligible to continue onto the genetic counseling and testing phases was very high (Figure 1): 94.3% of those determined eligible attended the pre-test genetic counseling session, 99.6% provided a Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) sample for genetic testing, and 97.6% of those individuals returned to learn their genetic test results

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Summary

Introduction

Recruiting deaf and hard-of-hearing participants, sign language-users, for genetics health service research is challenging due to communication barriers, mistrust toward genetics, and researchers’ unfamiliarity with deaf people. This article evaluates the Deaf Genetics Project’s (DGP) degree of success at motivating a hard-to-reach, underserved population – ranging from culturally Deaf to hard-of-hearing individuals – to participate in a genetic counseling and test study through a social marketing framework that addresses critical social determinants of health: social inclusion and social cohesion. Recruiting individuals in underserved populations into health service research studies is problematic [1,2,3], recruiting deafa participants for health service research is even more challenging due to this population’s cultural and linguistic diversity, communication barriers, literacy level, mistrust, and researchers’ unfamiliarity with deaf people [4,5,6,7]. Research on effective methods for motivating deaf individuals to participate in genetics health service research is essential for reducing health disparities

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