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Effects of Recruitment Messaging on Ethnic/Racial Minority Screening in a RCT for Prenatal Insomnia: An Experimental Approach.
Effects of Recruitment Messaging on Ethnic/Racial Minority Screening in a RCT for Prenatal Insomnia: An Experimental Approach. Behavioral sleep medicine Ponting, C., McClelland, B., Mah, R., Neuhaus, J., Manber, R., Krystal, A. D., Moran, P., Felder, J. N. 2025: 1-10Abstract
Using data from a nationwide recruitment campaign for an RCT evaluating digital cognitive behavioral therapy for prenatal insomnia, we tested whether a recruitment message that identified a racial/ethnic disparity in sleep quality (sleep disparities message) would increase the proportion of participants who engaged in study screening compared to a recruitment message without identified ethnic/racial disparities (standard message). We also tested whether the magnitude of the association of message type with completed eligibility screening varied by race/ethnicity.Pregnant people (n =?203,664) were randomly assigned to receive a sleep disparities or standard recruitment e-mail. A total of 1,782 pregnant people opened the recruitment e-mails. We used chi-square tests to compare the proportions of e-mails that led to study screening outcomes between the two e-mail message conditions.The chi-square tests revealed that a smaller proportion of prospective participants who received a sleep disparities message visited the screening website X2?=?8.83, p?=?.003 and completed a study screener X2 =?4.92, p?=?.026 compared to those who received a standard message. Results of a logistic regression detected no statistically significant interactions between race/ethnicity and message type on the probability of a completing a study screener.Manipulating and measuring the effects of recruitment messages can identify effective strategies for diversifying the participant pools in CBT-I trials.
View details for DOI 10.1080/15402002.2025.2473346
View details for PubMedID 40040476