Multilevel Provider-Based Sampling for Recruitment of Pregnant Women and Mother-Newborn Dyads

Thomas J McLaughlin, Onesky Aupont, Claudia A Kozinetz, David Hubble, Tiffany A Moore-Simas, Deborah Davis, Christina Park, Ruth Brenner, Deidre Sepavich, Marianne Felice, Chantal Caviness, Tim Downs, Beatrice J Selwyn, Michele R Forman, Thomas J McLaughlin, Onesky Aupont, Claudia A Kozinetz, David Hubble, Tiffany A Moore-Simas, Deborah Davis, Christina Park, Ruth Brenner, Deidre Sepavich, Marianne Felice, Chantal Caviness, Tim Downs, Beatrice J Selwyn, Michele R Forman

Abstract

Objective: In 2010, the National Children's Study launched 3 alternative recruitment methods to test possible improvements in efficiency compared with traditional household-based recruitment and participant enrollment. In 2012, a fourth method, provider-based sampling (PBS), tested a probability-based sampling of prenatal provider locations supplemented by a second cohort of neonates born at a convenience sample of maternity hospitals.

Methods: From a sampling frame of 472 prenatal care provider locations and 59 maternity hospitals, 49 provider and 7 hospital locations within or just outside 3 counties participated in study recruitment. During first prenatal care visits or immediately postdelivery at these locations, face-to-face contact was used to screen and recruit eligible women.

Results: Of 1450 screened women, 1270 were eligible. Consent rates at prenatal provider locations (62%-74% by county) were similar to those at birth locations (64%-77% by county). During 6 field months, 3 study centers enrolled a total prenatal cohort of 530 women (the majority in the first trimester) and during 2 months enrolled a birth cohort of an additional 320 mother-newborn dyads. As personnel became experienced in the field, the time required to enroll a woman in the prenatal cohort declined from up to 200 hours to 50 to 100 hours per woman recruited.

Conclusions: We demonstrated that PBS was feasible and operationally efficient in recruiting a representative cohort of newborns from 3 diverse US counties. Our findings suggest that PBS is a practical approach to recruit large pregnancy and birth cohorts across the United States.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00852904.

Conflict of interest statement

POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.

Copyright © 2016 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
Cumulative Counts of Women Enrolled in Prenatal Cohort, by County and the Average Number for the 3 Counties
FIGURE 2
FIGURE 2
Percent of women by gestational age in trimester at time of consent in prenatal cohort. Cum, cumulative.
FIGURE 3
FIGURE 3
Total hours of administrative/management and field activities/data collection required per consented woman in the prenatal cohort.

Source: PubMed

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