Recruitment and retention of homeless mentally ill participants in research.

Are the unstable residential and personal lives of homeless mentally ill (HMI) individuals so difficult as to preclude their inclusion in rigorous, longitudinal research protocols? The continued presence of HMI individuals in U.S. society has prompted the mental health research community to reconsider the question of whether clinical trial and demonstration research protocols are feasible with this population. This article briefly examines the existing research literature on recruitment and retention rates in recent studies of this population and, in more detail, the specific strategies used by researchers to recruit and retain HMI individuals as research participants. In general, with sufficient resources and the persistent use of existing strategies for recruitment and retention, HMI individuals can be successfully studied over time. Finally, to demonstrate this potential, the recruitment and retention strategies of the San Diego McKinney Homeless Mentally Ill Demonstration Research Program are described.

[1]  James D. Wright,et al.  Tracking non-traditional populations in longitudinal studies☆ , 1995 .

[2]  P. A. Martin Recruitment of research subjects. , 1995, Applied nursing research : ANR.

[3]  D. Bybee,et al.  Short versus longer term effectiveness of an outreach program for the homeless mentally Ill , 1994, American journal of community psychology.

[4]  G. Holden,et al.  The recruitment of research participants: a review. , 1993, Social work in health care.

[5]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Health care utilization and costs after entry into an outreach program for homeless mentally ill veterans. , 1993, Hospital & community psychiatry.

[6]  C. Murphy Increasing the response rates of reluctant professionals to mail surveys. , 1993, Applied nursing research : ANR.

[7]  D. Bybee,et al.  Tracking and Follow-Up Methods for Research On Homelessness , 1993 .

[8]  J. Lave,et al.  Clinical Trials of Primary Care Treatments for Major Depression: Issues in Design, Recruitment and Treatment , 1993, International journal of psychiatry in medicine.

[9]  Souder Je The consumer approach to recruitment of elder subjects. , 1992 .

[10]  S. Newburg,et al.  Motivation of subjects to participate in a research trial. , 1992, Applied nursing research : ANR.

[11]  G. Morse,et al.  Mental Health and Other Human Service Needs of Homeless People , 1992 .

[12]  J. Cramer,et al.  Patient recruitment in clinical trials , 1992 .

[13]  P. Koegel,et al.  Problems in the Assessment of Mental Illness among the Homeless Empirical Approach , 1992 .

[14]  R. Coates,et al.  Cancer screening intervention among black women in inner-city Atlanta--design of a study. , 1992, Public health reports.

[15]  W. McAuliffe,et al.  Implementation issues and techniques in randomized trials of outpatient psychosocial treatments for drug abusers: recruitment of subjects. , 1992, The American journal of drug and alcohol abuse.

[16]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Involvement in an Outreach and Residential Treatment Program for Homeless Mentally Ill Veterans , 1991, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[17]  J. Buckner,et al.  A decade of research and services for homeless mentally ill persons. Where do we stand , 1991 .

[18]  F. Crosby,et al.  Enhancing Subject Recruitment for Nursing Research , 1991, Clinical nurse specialist CNS.

[19]  K. Ahijevych,et al.  Differences in volunteer and randomly acquired samples. , 1990, Applied nursing research : ANR.

[20]  R. Cnaan,et al.  Outreach Efforts with Dually Diagnosed Homeless Persons , 1990 .

[21]  D. Rog,et al.  Mental health services for homeless mentally ill persons. Federal initiatives and current service trends. , 1990, The American psychologist.

[22]  I. Piliavin,et al.  Toward a Longitudinal Analysis of Homelessness , 1990 .

[23]  J. Lambert,et al.  Increasing response rates in physicians' mail surveys: an experimental study. , 1989, American journal of public health.

[24]  J. Diekmann,et al.  Strategies for Accessment and Recruitment of Subjects for Nursing Research , 1989, Western journal of nursing research.

[25]  P. Koegel,et al.  Methodology for Obtaining a Representative Sample of Homeless Persons , 1988 .

[26]  J. Belcher,et al.  Relationship between the deinstitutionalization model, psychiatric disability, and homelessness. , 1988, Health & social work.

[27]  G. Patterson,et al.  An approach to the problem of recruitment and retention rates for longitudinal research. , 1987 .

[28]  S. Segal,et al.  The Community Living Room , 1985, Social casework.

[29]  R. Weiss,et al.  The nature of case manager support. , 1984, Hospital & community psychiatry.