Diabetes Care, Vol 21, Issue 2 213-215, Copyright © 1998 by American Diabetes Association
Offering a randomized trial of intensive therapy for IDDM to adolescents. Reasons for refusal, patient characteristics, and recruiter effects
KP Tercyak, SB Johnson, KA Kirkpatrick and JH Silverstein
Department of Clinical and Health Psychology, University of Florida Health Science Center, Gainesville 32610-0165, USA.
OBJECTIVE: To identify reasons adolescents refuse to participate in a
randomized trial of intensive therapy (IT) for IDDM, to describe the
patient characteristics of those who consent and those who refuse to
participate, and to examine recruiter effects on trial participation rates.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A total of 99 adolescents, age 11-18 years,
were provided with the results of the Diabetes Control and Complications
Trial and approached for possible study participation by two nurse
recruiters. Adolescents refusing the trial were administered a
semi-structured interview to describe reasons for study refusal; responses
were recorded and later coded into categories. Patient characteristics of
consenters and refusers were collected and compared. The differential
enrollment rates of the two nurse recruiters were also compared. RESULTS: A
total of 56 patients (approximately 57%) agreed to participate; 43 refused.
The four most common reasons for study refusal were 1) increased clinic
visits (42%), 2) increased insulin injections (30%), 3) increased frequency
of self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) (28%), and 4) transportation
difficulties (19%). Concerns about randomization to an unwanted treatment
condition and fears of hypoglycemia or weight gain were rarely cited.
Consenters and refusers did not differ in demographic characteristics,
disease status, or family composition. Large differences were found between
the two nurse recruiters: one experienced a 60% refusal rate, while the
other experienced a 27% refusal rate. CONCLUSIONS: Issues of convenience
(increased clinic visits, transportation difficulties) and concerns about
the demands of IT (increased injections and SMBG) were the predominant
reasons for trial refusal. Patient characteristics did not differentiate
consenters from refusers. However, recruiters differed greatly in study
refusal rates, suggesting that provider behavior may be an important but
understudied aspect of adolescent acceptance of randomized trials in
general and IT in particular.