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Recruiting Families Using Social Media Versus Pediatric Obesity Clinics: A Secondary Analysis of the Aim2Be RCT

IALH Research Fellow Jean Buckler has co-authored a new research article entitled Recruiting families using social media versus pediatric obesity clinics: A secondary analysis of the Aim2Be RCT. Collaborating authors include Olivia De-Jongh González, Geoff D. C. Ball, Jill Hamilton, Josephine Ho, Katherine M. Morrison, and Louise C. Mâsse. The article was published in Contemporary Clinical Trials.

Abstract:

Background: Recruitment of participants continues to be a challenge that researchers must overcome to yield successful study results. Over the past decade, there has been a dramatic increase in the use of social media platforms to recruit research participants. We conducted a secondary analysis of the Aim2Be randomized controlled trial (RCT) to examine if there was variability between participants recruited via social media versus pediatric obesity clinics.

Methods: Parents and their children living with overweight or obesity were recruited through social media (i.e., Facebook advertisements) (n = 119) or pediatric obesity management clinics (n = 95) to participate in the Aim2Be RCT. We compared recruitment costs, recruitment rate, participant retention, intervention engagement, obesity-related risk factors, and behavioral habits.

Results: Facebook recruitment resulted in more participant contacts, but higher attrition during ‘high effort’ stages of the recruitment process. Group differences emerged regarding costs (Facebook: $407 versus clinics: $699). There were no group differences in participant retention or intervention engagement. Families recruited from Facebook were younger parents (42.6 versus 46.0 years; p < 0.001) and children (12.2 versus 13.9 years; p < 0.001), a higher percentage male children, and fewer had previously participated in a pediatric weight management program. Parents recruited from Facebook self-reported greater screen time for themselves, and their children reported lower physical activity levels and higher caloric and sugar intake.

Conclusions: Social media and clinical site recruitment are complementary strategies that appear to draw in families with different profiles, but regardless of how they were recruited, all families had the potential to benefit from pediatric obesity management.

To read the full article, see https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cct.2023.107322

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