作者
Mariana Popa, Bridget Young, Nikki Rousseau, Mary G Cherry, Isobel Jenkins, Jane Cloke, Andrew Pettitt, Michael D Jenkinson, Saiqa Ahmed, Allan R Pemberton, Frances C Sherratt
发表日期
2024
期刊
Trials
卷号
25
出版商
BMC
简介
Background
Patients from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds are underserved in randomised controlled trials, yet they experience a much greater burden of disease compared with patients from socioeconomically advantaged areas. It is crucial to make trials more inclusive to ensure that treatments and interventions are safe and effective in real-world contexts. Improving how information about trials is verbally communicated is an unexplored strategy to make trials more inclusive. This study examined how trials are communicated verbally, comparing consultations involving patients from the most and least socioeconomically disadvantaged areas.
Methods
Secondary qualitative analysis of 55 trial consultation transcripts from 41 patients, sampled from 3 qualitative studies embedded in their respective UK multi-site, cancer-related randomised controlled trials. Patients living in the most and least …