Research Subject Enroller Program: A Key to Successful Emergency Medicine Research
Open Access
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Academic Emergency Medicine
- Vol. 4 (3), 231-233
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1553-2712.1997.tb03748.x
Abstract
To describe the successful use and impact of individuals paid to enroll clinical research subjects in support of emergency medicine (EM) research. Paramedics and college students were hired to identify/enroll subjects in EM research studies 14 hours/day, 7 days/week. Potential subjects were identified by monitoring emergency medical services radios, routine rounding in the ED, and communication with the ED attending and charge nurse. Enrollers were trained in phlebotomy, obtaining ECGs, obtaining consent in appropriate studies, and post-ED follow-up. They supported ED prospective studies and multicenter clinical trials, as well as departmental surveys and retrospective studies. Survey support included mailing list development, mailing completion, survey database design, and data entry. Over 18 months, 17 prospective studies and 8 surveys/retrospective studies were completed. 2,175 subjects were enrolled in prospective studies and 6,500 surveys/retrospective reviews were completed. In the year prior to enroller program initiation, < 100 subjects were enrolled in 3 departmental studies. Use of paid, clinical research subject enrollers supports successful recruitment of study subjects and the completion of EM research studies.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- College Research Associates: A Program to Increase Emergency Medicine Clinical Research ProductivityAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1996
- Characteristics influencing career decisions of academic and nonacademic emergency physiciansAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1994
- Academic emergency medicine: A national profile with and without emergency medicine residency programsAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1992
- Meeting the goals of academia: Characteristics of emergency medicine faculty academic work stylesAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1992
- Autonomous departments of emergency medicine in contemporary academic medical centersAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1991
- A review of research methodology in an emergency medicine journalAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1983