Log on / register
Feedback | Support | My details
Open AccessStudy protocol

Recruitment of heterosexual couples in public health research: a study protocol

James M McMahon1 email, Stephanie Tortu2 email, Leilani Torres1 email, Enrique R Pouget1 email and Rahul Hamid1 email

National Development and Research Institutes, New York, USA

Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, USA

author email corresponding author email

BMC Medical Research Methodology 2003, 3:24doi:10.1186/1471-2288-3-24

Published: 31 October 2003

Abstract

Background

Public health research involving social or kin groups (such as sexual partners or family members), rather than samples of unrelated individuals, has become more widespread in response to social ecological approaches to disease treatment and prevention. This approach requires the development of innovative sampling, recruitment and screening methodologies tailored to the study of related individuals.

Methods

In this paper, we describe a set of sampling, recruitment and screening protocols developed to enlist urban, drug-using, heterosexual couples into a public health research study. This population is especially hard to reach because they are engaged in illegal and/or stigmatized behaviors. The protocols were designed to integrate adaptive sampling, street- and referral-based recruitment, and screening procedures to verify study eligibility and relationship status.

Discussion

Recruitment of heterosexual couples through one partner, preferably the female, can be an effective enlistment technique. Verification of relationship status is an important component of dyadic research. Comparison of parallel questionnaires administered to each member of a dyad can aid in the assessment of relationship status. However, multiple independent sources of information should be used to verify relationship status when available. Adaptive sampling techniques were effective in reaching drug-using heterosexual couples in an urban setting, and the application of these methods to other groups of related individuals in clinical and public health research may prove to be useful. However, care must be taken to consider potential sources of sampling bias when interpreting and generalizing study results.


© 1999-2009 BioMed Central Ltd unless otherwise stated. Part of Springer Science+Business Media.