Scientific journal paper Q1
Increased interaction and procedural flexibility favoured participation: Study across European cohorts of preterm born individuals
Sandra Marques (Marques, S. C. S.); Julia Nadine Doetsch (Doetsch, J. N.); Raquel Teixeira (Teixeira, R.); Georgia Abate (Abate, G.); Anne Brødsgaard (Brødsgaard, A.); Ann-Mari Brubakk (Brubakk, A.-M.); Grazia Colombo (Colombo, G.); Marina Cuttini (Cuttini, M.); Kari Anne I. Evensen (Evensen, K. A. I.); Vicky Hennissen (Hennissen, V.); Marit S. Indredavik (Indredavik, M. S.); Eero Kajantie (Kajantie, E.); Jo Lebeer (Lebeer, J.); Sylvia van der Pal (van der Pal, S.); Pernille Pedersen (Pedersen, P.); Iemke Sarrechia (Sarrechia, I.); Eeva Virtanen (Virtanen, E.); Henrique Barros (Barros, H.); et al.
Journal Title
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
Year (definitive publication)
2022
Language
English
Country
United States of America
More Information
Web of Science®

Times Cited: 1

(Last checked: 2026-07-16 14:49)

View record in Web of Science®


: 0.0
Scopus

Times Cited: 1

(Last checked: 2026-07-09 07:58)

View record in Scopus


: 0.0
Google Scholar

Times Cited: 2

(Last checked: 2026-07-12 17:52)

View record in Google Scholar

This publication is not indexed in Overton

Abstract
Objective: To understand participation and attrition phenomena variability in European cohorts of individuals born preterm through in-depth exploration of the interplay of situational elements involved. Methods: Multi-situated qualitative design, using focus groups, semi-structured interviews and collaborative visual methodology with a purposive sample of adults born preterm, parents and professionals (n = 124) from eight cohorts in seven European countries. Results: Most cohort participants were motivated by altruism/solidarity and gratitude/sense of duty to reciprocate (only absent in adults aged 19 – 21), followed by expectation of direct benefit to one's health and knowledge amongst participating adults. Common deterrents were perceived failure in reciprocity as in insufficient/inadequate interaction and information sharing, and postal questionnaires. Combining multipurpose, flexible strategies for contact and assessment, reminders, face-to-face and shorter periodicity and not simply adding retention strategies or financial incentives favoured participation. Professionals’ main challenges entailed resources, funding and, European societal changes related to communication and geopolitical environment. Conclusion: Retention would benefit from tailoring inclusive strategies throughout the cohorts’ life cycle and consistent promotion of reciprocal altruistic research goals. Investing in regular interaction, flexibility in procedures, participant involvement and return of results can help mitigate attrition as well as considering mothers as main facilitators to participating children and impaired adults.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
European cohorts,Premature,Participation,Multi-situated qualitative study,Collaborative methods
  • Health Sciences - Medical and Health Sciences
  • Sociology - Social Sciences
  • Anthropology - Social Sciences
Funding Records
Funding Reference Funding Entity
UIDB/04750/2020 Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
733280 Comissão Europeia