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The influence of social media on recruitment to surgical trials

The influence of social media on recruitment to surgical trials

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_c8a33976dccf4f16bee88e7f57dcf3d6

The influence of social media on recruitment to surgical trials

About this item

Full title

The influence of social media on recruitment to surgical trials

Author / Creator

Bisset, Carly Nichola , Carter, Ben , Law, Jennifer , Hewitt, Jonathan , Parmar, Kat , Moug, Susan Joan , Ross, Bryony , Oleksiewicz, Julia , Fearnhead, Nicola , Jump, Christopher , Boyle, Jemma , Shaw, Alex , Barker, Jonathan , Hughes, Jane , Randall, Jonathan , Tonga, Isileli , Kynaston, James , Boal, Matthew , Eardley, Nicola , Kane, Elizabeth , Reader, Harriet , Mahapatra, Sunanda Roy , Garner-Jones, Michael , Tan, Jessica Juliana , Mohamed, Said , George, Rina , Whiteman, Ed , Malik, Kamran , Smart, Christopher J. , Bogdan, Monica , Chaudhury, Madhu Parna , Sharma, Videha , Subar, Daren , Patel, Panna , Chok, Sok-Moi , Lim, Evelyn , Adhiyaman, Vedamurthy , Davies, Glesni , Ross, Ellen , Maitra, Rudra , Steele, Colin W. , Roxburgh, Campbell , Griffiths, Shelly , Blencowe, Natalie S. , Kirkham, Emily N. , Abraham, John S. , Griffiths, Kirsty , Abdulaal, Yasser , Iqbal, Muhammad Rafaih , Tarazi, Munir , Hill, James , Khan, Azam , Farrell, Ian , Conn, Gemma , Patel, Jugal , Reddy, Hyder , Sarveswaran, Janahan , Arunachalam, Lakshmanan , Malik, Afaq , Ponchietti, Luca , Pawelec, Krystian , Goh, Yan Mei , Vitish-Sharma, Parveen , Saad, Ahmed , Smyth, Edward , Crees, Amy , Merker, Louise , Bashir, Nahida , Williams, Gethin , Hayes, Jennifer , Walters, Kelly , Harries, Rhiannon , Singh, Rahulpreet , Henderson, Nikola A. , Polignano, Francesco M. , Knight, Ben , Alder, Louise , Kenchington, Alexandra , Goh, Yan Li , Dicurzio, Ilaria , Griffiths, Ewen , Alani, Ahmed , Knight, Katrina , MacGoey, Patrick , Ng, Guat Shi , Mackenzie, Naomi , Maitra, Ishaan , Moug, Susan , Ong, Kelly , McGrath, Daniel , Gammeri, Emanuele , Lafaurie, Guillame , Faulkner, Gemma , Benedetto, Gabriele Di , McGovern, Julia , Subramanian, Bharathi , Narang, Sunil Kumar , Nowers, Jennifer , Smart, Neil J. , Daniels, Ian R. , on behalf of the ELF Study Group Collaborative Authorship and ELF Study Group Collaborative Authorship

Publisher

England: BioMed Central Ltd

Journal title

BMC medical research methodology, 2020-07, Vol.20 (1), p.201-201, Article 201

Language

English

Formats

Publication information

Publisher

England: BioMed Central Ltd

More information

Scope and Contents

Contents

Social media has changed the way surgeons communicate worldwide, particularly in dissemination of trial results. However, it is unclear if social media could be used in recruitment to surgical trials. This study aimed to investigate the influence of Twitter in promoting surgical recruitment in The Emergency Laparotomy and Frailty (ELF) Study.
The ELF Study was a UK-based, prospective, observational cohort that aimed to assess the influence of frailty on 90-day mortality in older adults undergoing emergency surgery. A power calculation required 500 patients to be recruited to detect a 10% change in mortality associated with frailty. A 12-week recruitment period was selected, calculated from information submitted by participating hospitals and the numbers of emergency surgeries performed in adults aged > 65 years. A Twitter handle was designed (@ELFStudy) with eye-catching logos to encourage enrolment and inform the public and clinicians involved in the study. Twitter Analytics and Twitonomy (Digonomy Pty Ltd) were used to analyse user engagement in relation to patient recruitment.
After 90 days of data collection, 49 sites from Scotland, England and Wales recruited 952 consecutive patients undergoing emergency laparotomy, with data logged into a database created on REDCap. Target recruitment (n = 500) was achieved by week 11. A total of 591 tweets were published by @ELFStudy since its conception, making 218,136 impressions at time of writing. The number of impressions (number of times users see a particular tweet) prior to March 20th 2017 (study commencement date) was 23,335 (343.2 per tweet), compared to the recruitment period with 114,314 impressions (256.3 per tweet), ending June 20th 2017. Each additional tweet was associated with an increase in recruitment of 1.66 (95%CI 1.36 to 1.97; p < 0.001).
The ELF Study over-recruited by nearly 100%, reaching over 200,000 people across the U.K. Branding enhanced tweet aesthetics and helped increase tweet engagement to stimulate discussion and healthy competition amongst clinicians to aid trial recruitment. Other studies may draw from the social media experiences of the ELF Study to optimise collaboration amongst researchers.
This study is registered online at www.clinicaltrials.gov (registration number NCT02952430 ) and has been approved by the National Health Service Research Ethics Committee....

Alternative Titles

Full title

The influence of social media on recruitment to surgical trials

Authors, Artists and Contributors

Author / Creator

Bisset, Carly Nichola
Carter, Ben
Law, Jennifer
Hewitt, Jonathan
Parmar, Kat
Moug, Susan Joan
Ross, Bryony
Oleksiewicz, Julia
Fearnhead, Nicola
Jump, Christopher
Boyle, Jemma
Shaw, Alex
Barker, Jonathan
Hughes, Jane
Randall, Jonathan
Tonga, Isileli
Kynaston, James
Boal, Matthew
Eardley, Nicola
Kane, Elizabeth
Reader, Harriet
Mahapatra, Sunanda Roy
Garner-Jones, Michael
Tan, Jessica Juliana
Mohamed, Said
George, Rina
Whiteman, Ed
Malik, Kamran
Smart, Christopher J.
Bogdan, Monica
Chaudhury, Madhu Parna
Sharma, Videha
Subar, Daren
Patel, Panna
Chok, Sok-Moi
Lim, Evelyn
Adhiyaman, Vedamurthy
Davies, Glesni
Ross, Ellen
Maitra, Rudra
Steele, Colin W.
Roxburgh, Campbell
Griffiths, Shelly
Blencowe, Natalie S.
Kirkham, Emily N.
Abraham, John S.
Griffiths, Kirsty
Abdulaal, Yasser
Iqbal, Muhammad Rafaih
Tarazi, Munir
Hill, James
Khan, Azam
Farrell, Ian
Conn, Gemma
Patel, Jugal
Reddy, Hyder
Sarveswaran, Janahan
Arunachalam, Lakshmanan
Malik, Afaq
Ponchietti, Luca
Pawelec, Krystian
Goh, Yan Mei
Vitish-Sharma, Parveen
Saad, Ahmed
Smyth, Edward
Crees, Amy
Merker, Louise
Bashir, Nahida
Williams, Gethin
Hayes, Jennifer
Walters, Kelly
Harries, Rhiannon
Singh, Rahulpreet
Henderson, Nikola A.
Polignano, Francesco M.
Knight, Ben
Alder, Louise
Kenchington, Alexandra
Goh, Yan Li
Dicurzio, Ilaria
Griffiths, Ewen
Alani, Ahmed
Knight, Katrina
MacGoey, Patrick
Ng, Guat Shi
Mackenzie, Naomi
Maitra, Ishaan
Moug, Susan
Ong, Kelly
McGrath, Daniel
Gammeri, Emanuele
Lafaurie, Guillame
Faulkner, Gemma
Benedetto, Gabriele Di
McGovern, Julia
Subramanian, Bharathi
Narang, Sunil Kumar
Nowers, Jennifer
Smart, Neil J.
Daniels, Ian R.
on behalf of the ELF Study Group Collaborative Authorship
ELF Study Group Collaborative Authorship

Identifiers

Primary Identifiers

Record Identifier

TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_c8a33976dccf4f16bee88e7f57dcf3d6

Permalink

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_c8a33976dccf4f16bee88e7f57dcf3d6

Other Identifiers

ISSN

1471-2288

E-ISSN

1471-2288

DOI

10.1186/s12874-020-01072-1

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