Obtaining hospital and physician participation in a case-control study of colon cancer.
- 1 December 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 71 (12) , 1314-1319
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.71.12.1314
Abstract
This paper describes efforts to solicit hospital and physician participation for a case-control study of the etiology of colon cancer in the five Pennsylvania counties of the Philadelphia metropolitan area. Forty-seven of the 70 hospitals in this region were eligible for inclusion in the study. Thirty-seven (79%) agreed to participate, 27 of them within six months of initial contact. The median time to approval of participation was three months and the median number of separate contacts was nine. At least five participating hospitals submitted the protocol to their lawyers and nine required that special procedures be developed for release of patient information. Two hundred fourteen of 256 listed attending physicians were eligible for participation; 161 (75%) permitted all patients to be contacted 23 (11%) permitted some patients to be contacted; 30 (14%) refused all patient contact. A significant association between type of specialty and type of permission was found (p approximately .005). Concerns about confidentiality and lack of personal advantage were frequently cited by non-participants. The validity of case-control studies relying on hospital or physician ascertainment of cases is seriously challenged by such lengthy delays and lack of participation which can result in a biased pool of potential cases.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Rise and Fall of Epidemiology, 1950–2000 A.D.New England Journal of Medicine, 1981
- Interpreting Ethical Guidelines for Dental Epidemiological SurveysJournal of Dental Research, 1980
- Ethical Considerations in Dental Epidemiological StudiesJournal of Dental Research, 1980
- Privacy, Confidentiality, and the Use of Medical Records in ResearchScience, 1980
- The privacy protection report and epidemiological research.American Journal of Public Health, 1978
- Old practices in a new age endanger information privacy.1977