Published on in Vol 13, No 4 (2011): Oct-Dec

Communications Between Volunteers and Health Researchers during Recruitment and Informed Consent: Qualitative Content Analysis of Email Interactions

Communications Between Volunteers and Health Researchers during Recruitment and Informed Consent: Qualitative Content Analysis of Email Interactions

Communications Between Volunteers and Health Researchers during Recruitment and Informed Consent: Qualitative Content Analysis of Email Interactions

Journals

  1. Cox S, McDonald M. Ethics is for human subjects too: Participant perspectives on responsibility in health research. Social Science & Medicine 2013;98:224 View
  2. Uhlig C, Seitz B, Eter N, Promesberger J, Busse H, van den Besselaar P. Efficiencies of Internet-Based Digital and Paper-Based Scientific Surveys and the Estimated Costs and Time for Different-Sized Cohorts. PLoS ONE 2014;9(10):e108441 View
  3. Rorie D, Flynn R, Mackenzie I, MacDonald T, Rogers A. The Treatment In Morning versus Evening (TIME) study: analysis of recruitment, follow-up and retention rates post-recruitment. Trials 2017;18(1) View
  4. Schleinkofer N, Raddatz J, Freiwald A, Evans D, Beuck L, Rüggeberg A, Liebetrau V. Environmental and biological controls on Na∕Ca ratios in scleractinian cold-water corals. Biogeosciences 2019;16(18):3565 View
  5. McDonald H, Dietrich T, Townsend A, Li L, Cox S, Backman C. Exploring occupational disruption among women after onset of rheumatoid arthritis. Arthritis Care & Research 2012;64(2):197 View
  6. Townsend A, Backman C, Adam P, Li L. A qualitative interview study: patient accounts of medication use in early rheumatoid arthritis from symptom onset to early postdiagnosis. BMJ Open 2013;3(2):e002164 View
  7. Townsend A, Backman C, Adam P, Li L. Women’s accounts of help-seeking in early rheumatoid arthritis from symptom onset to diagnosis. Chronic Illness 2014;10(4):259 View