Volume 47 | Number 3pt2 | June 2012

Abstract List

Denise Las Nueces, Karen Hacker M.D., M.P.H, Ann DiGirolamo, LeRoi S. Hicks


Objective

To examine the effectiveness of current community‐based participatory research () clinical trials involving racial and ethnic minorities.


Data Source

All published peer‐reviewed intervention articles in PubMed and databases from January 2003 to May 2010.


Study Design

We performed a systematic literature review.


Data Collection/Extraction Methods

Data were extracted on each study's characteristics, community involvement in research, subject recruitment and retention, and intervention effects.


Principle Findings

We found 19 articles meeting inclusion criteria. Of these, 14 were published from 2007 to 2010. Articles described some measures of community participation in research with great variability. Although trials examined a wide range of behavioral and clinical outcomes, such trials had very high success rates in recruiting and retaining minority participants and achieving significant intervention effects.


Conclusions

Significant publication gaps remain between and other interventional research methods. may be effective in increasing participation of racial and ethnic minority subjects in research and may be a powerful tool in testing the generalizability of effective interventions among these populations. holds promise as an approach that may contribute greatly to the study of health care delivery to disadvantaged populations.