@Article{信息:doi 10.2196 / / jmir。1752,作者=“Townsend, Anne and Amarsi, Zubin and Backman, Catherine L and Cox, Susan M and Li, Linda C”,标题=“志愿者与健康研究人员在招募和知情同意期间的交流:电子邮件互动的定性内容分析”,期刊=“J Med Internet Res”,年=“2011”,月=“Oct”,日=“13”,卷=“13”,数=“4”,页=“e84”,关键词=“Email”;招聘;知情同意;volunteer-researcher交互;类风湿性关节炎;定性研究;志愿者的动机;求助;背景:虽然互联网在研究中的使用越来越广泛,但在招募和早期志愿者-研究人员互动过程中,人们对常规电子邮件通信的作用知之甚少。 To gain insight into the standpoint of volunteers we analyzed email communications in an early rheumatoid arthritis qualitative interview study. Objectives: The objectives of our study were (1) to understand the perspectives and motivations of individuals who volunteered for an interview study about the experiences of early rheumatoid arthritis, and (2) to investigate the role of emails in volunteer--researcher interactions during recruitment. Methods: Between December 2007 and December 2008 we recruited 38 individuals with early rheumatoid arthritis through rheumatologist and family physician offices, arthritis Internet sites, and the Arthritis Research Centre of Canada for a (face-to-face) qualitative interview study. Interested individuals were invited to contact us via email or telephone. In this paper, we report on email communications from 12 of 29 volunteers who used email as their primary communication mode. Results: Emails offered insights into the perspective of study volunteers. They provided evidence prospectively about recruitment and informed consent in the context of early rheumatoid arthritis. First, some individuals anticipated that participating would have mutual benefits, for themselves and the research, suggesting a reciprocal quality to volunteering. Second, volunteering for the study was strongly motivated by a need to access health services and was both a help-seeking and self-managing strategy. Third, volunteers expressed ambivalence around participation, such as how far participating would benefit them, versus more general benefits for research. Fourth, practical difficulties of negotiating symptom impact, medical appointments, and research tasks were revealed. We also reflect on how emails documented volunteer--researcher interactions, illustrating typically undocumented researcher work during recruitment. Conclusions: Emails can be key forms of data. They provide richly contextual prospective records of an underresearched dimension of the research process: routine volunteer--researcher interactions during recruitment. Emails record the context of volunteering, and the motivations and priorities of volunteers. They also highlight the ``invisible work'' of research workers during what are typically considered to be standard administrative tasks. Further research is needed to fully understand the role of routine emails, what they may reveal about volunteers' decisions to participate, and their implications for research relationships---for example, whether they have the potential to foster rapport, trust, and understanding between volunteer and researcher, and ultimately shift the power dynamic of the volunteer--researcher relationship. ", issn="1438-8871", doi="10.2196/jmir.1752", url="//www.mybigtv.com/2011/4/e84/", url="https://doi.org/10.2196/jmir.1752", url="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21997713" }
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