Engaging smokers in research: Utility of Facebook in facilitating recruitment to a smoking cessation study

Social media, including Facebook outreach, is increasingly being used as a participant recruitment tool, and may be particularly useful in tobacco and smoking cessation studies. The Recruitment Innovation Center at Vanderbilt University Medical Center partnered with Project LUNA, a smoking cessation...

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Published inContemporary clinical trials Vol. 107; p. 106461
Main Authors Cook, Sarah K., Jerome, Rebecca N., Dunagan, Julia, Kennedy, Nan, Edwards, Terri, Minnix, Jennifer A., Witmer, Leann, Ferguson, Jennifer, Cinciripini, Paul, Wilkins, Consuelo, Harris, Paul
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Inc 01.08.2021
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ISSN1551-7144
1559-2030
1559-2030
DOI10.1016/j.cct.2021.106461

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Summary:Social media, including Facebook outreach, is increasingly being used as a participant recruitment tool, and may be particularly useful in tobacco and smoking cessation studies. The Recruitment Innovation Center at Vanderbilt University Medical Center partnered with Project LUNA, a smoking cessation study, to conduct a pilot social media campaign aimed at increasing study recruitment. Two posts encouraging study participation were developed and promoted on Facebook to users with an interest in smoking-related topics, with a link to a study-specific webpage. Facebook and website analytics were collected, including impressions, clicks, click-through rates, website traffic, and clicks to the study screening form. Study screening and enrollment data were also collected. The Facebook campaign ran in June 2019 in the greater Houston area. In total, the Facebook posts logged 1,179,844 impressions, 6490 clicks, and an overall click-through rate of 0.55%. There were no differences in response to the two different promotional posts. Approximately 3812 unique individuals visited an intermediary study page, with 473 expressing interest in the study. Forty-three potential participants contacted the study team, resulting in study enrollment and randomization of 23 participants, with an estimated cost per enrolled participant of $441. The social media campaign was successful at increasing outreach and interest in the LUNA study. However, the price-per-participant enrolled was higher than in comparable tobacco cessation studies. These results and lessons learned may be beneficial to others considering social media as a recruitment method for their clinical research trial.
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ISSN:1551-7144
1559-2030
1559-2030
DOI:10.1016/j.cct.2021.106461