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BACKGROUND: physical activity studies in older people often have poor recruitment. Including a questionnaire with the invitation would provide information about non-participants and selection bias, but could reduce recruitment. Telephone contact might encourage participation. OBJECTIVE: to test the effects of different strategies for recruitment into a study of physical activity in older people. DESIGN: factorial randomised controlled trial. Randomisation by household into four groups: telephone contact plus questionnaire, telephone contact only, questionnaire only, neither. SETTING: primary care, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom. PARTICIPANTS: 560 patients > or = 65 years randomly selected after exclusions. INTERVENTIONS: questionnaire to assess health, functional ability and physical activity. Telephone contact by the research nurse a week after sending study information. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: recruitment into physical activity study. RESULTS: telephone contact increased recruitment: contact 47.9% (134/280), no contact 37.9% (106/280), difference (adjusted for the clustering effect of household) 10.0% (95% CI 0.2-19.8). Questionnaire inclusion did not significantly reduce recruitment: no questionnaire 44.3% (124/280) questionnaire 41.4% (116/280) difference -2.9% (95% CI -12.7-7.0). CONCLUSIONS: telephone contact significantly increased recruitment and should be considered in studies where recruitment may be low. While inclusion of a questionnaire provided valuable information on non-participants and did not significantly reduce recruitment, an adverse recruitment effect could not be excluded.
Harris et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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