Recruiting Participants for Research From Online Communities

Increasing numbers of people use the Internet for information and support about health and illness experiences. Likewise, researchers are increasingly turning to Internet communities as recruitment sites for research participants. Based on the use of online recruitment for a study of women living with lupus, the challenges and strategies associated with this method are discussed. How participants were obtained through posts on Web sites, the role of gatekeepers in accessing online communities, issues associated with list lurkers and posters, and challenges to authenticity when working with a sample recruited from this environment are covered, as are strategies for addressing identified problems.

[1]  John W. LeMasney,et al.  Protecting Children From Online Sexual Predators: Technological, Psychoeducational, and Legal Considerations. , 2004 .

[2]  Declan T. Barry Assessing Culture via the Internet: Methods and Techniques for Psychological Research , 2001, Cyberpsychology Behav. Soc. Netw..

[3]  G. Eysenbach,et al.  Ethical issues in qualitative research on internet communities , 2001, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[4]  C. Mendelson Managing a Medically and Socially Complex Life: Women Living With Lupus , 2006, Qualitative health research.

[5]  Jennifer Preece,et al.  What lurkers and posters think of each other [online community] , 2004, 37th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2004. Proceedings of the.

[6]  C. Mendelson Gentle Hugs: Internet Listservs as Sources of Support for Women With Lupus , 2003, ANS. Advances in nursing science.

[7]  Amy Bruckman,et al.  “Go Away”: Participant Objections to Being Studied and the Ethics of Chatroom Research , 2004, Inf. Soc..

[8]  Michael Hardey,et al.  ‘The Story of My Illness’: Personal Accounts of Illness on the Internet , 2002 .

[9]  P. Mckeever,et al.  Recruitment issues in healthcare research: the situation in home care. , 2003, Health & social care in the community.

[10]  Katelyn Y. A. McKenna,et al.  Can you see the real me? Activation and expression of the "true self" on the Internet. , 2002 .

[11]  J Elford,et al.  Reflecting on the experience of interviewing online: perspectives from the Internet and HIV study in London , 2004, AIDS care.

[12]  J Sixsmith,et al.  Ethical Issues in the Documentary Data Analysis of Internet Posts and Archives , 2001, Qualitative health research.

[13]  Joan Fleitas,et al.  Spinning Tales from the World Wide Web: Qualitative Research in an Electronic Environment , 1998 .

[14]  G. S. Bowen,et al.  The Internet as recruitment tool for HIV studies: viable strategy for reaching at-risk Hispanic MSM in Miami? , 2004, AIDS care.

[15]  Emil H Schemitsch,et al.  Internet Versus Mailed Questionnaires: A Controlled Comparison (2) , 2004, Journal of medical Internet research.

[16]  Fiona Stewart,et al.  Internet Communication and Qualitative Research , 2000 .

[17]  Sonja Utz,et al.  Types of Deception and Underlying Motivation , 2005 .

[18]  J. Walther Research ethics in Internet-enabled research: Human subjects issues and methodological myopia , 2002, Ethics and Information Technology.

[19]  David J. Pittenger,et al.  Internet Research: An Opportunity to Revisit Classic Ethical Problems in Behavioral Research , 2003, Ethics & behavior.

[20]  L. Siminoff,et al.  Recruiting vulnerable populations for research: revisiting the ethical issues. , 2003, Journal of professional nursing : official journal of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing.

[21]  E. Im,et al.  Methodological issues in the recruitment of ethnic minority subjects to research via the Internet: a discussion paper. , 2005, International journal of nursing studies.

[22]  N. Weinberg,et al.  Online help: cancer patients participate in a computer-mediated support group. , 1996, Health & social work.

[23]  Adam Joinson,et al.  Explanations for the Perpetration of and Reactions to Deception in a Virtual Community , 2002 .

[24]  B. Nonnecke,et al.  WHY LURKERS LURK , 2001 .

[25]  M. Feldman Munchausen by Internet: Detecting Factitious Illness and Crisis on the Internet , 2000, Southern medical journal.

[26]  Jennifer Preece,et al.  Lurker demographics: counting the silent , 2000, CHI.