Strategies for Motivating Latino Couples' Participation in Qualitative Health Research and Their Effects on Sample Construction
H. Mabel Preloran, PhD,
Carole H. Browner, PhD, MPH and
Eli Lieber, PhD
The authors are with the Center for Culture and Health, Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to H. Mabel Preloran, PhD, Center for Culture and Health, Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1759 (e-mail: hprelora{at}ucla.edu).
Many investigators report difficulties recruiting low-incomeLatinos into health research projects, especially when theyseek to enroll more than one family member. We developed a seriesof strategies that proved effective in motivating candidateswho were initially reluctant to enroll.
There is a possibility that these strategies biased the compositionof the sample. Predictably, the reasons participants gave forenrolling were correlated with the recruitment strategy thathad brought them into the study. Furthermore, we found statisticallysignificant associations between recruitment technique and keystudy variables (e.g., the domestic stability of the couple).
By increasing investigators' ability to recruit Latinos, however,the strategies outlined should help to ensure that Latinos'experiences are given due weight in the deliberations of medicalprofessionals and policymakers.
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