Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
Targeted payments for trials might help improve recruitment and quality
"Why is it every
time that I mention the word `reform' GPs reach nervously for their
wallets?" These cynical words from Kenneth Clarke, former secretary
of state for health, contain a grain of truth. Most British general
practices are small businesses, understandably influenced by financial
incentives and disincentives Demand for high quality research in primary care is growing,
particularly multicentre randomised controlled trials. But such studies
are difficult to conduct, disruptive to routine practice, and may fail
to recruit enough general practitioners or patients.2 The
Mant report advocates expanding recruitment of multidisciplinary researchers and redistributing funds to support the required
infrastructure.3 Such a long term strategy to build
capability is essential but will not be sufficient on its own to
improve rates of practice recruitment to clinical trials.
Several factors are known to influence general practitioners'
participation in research. One is the level of personal interest in the
research topic.4 Concern has grown recently that
"enquiry led research is becoming endangered with the growth in the
commissioning of research" and that general practitioners and their
own research questions may be marginalised.5 Ownership is
important, but external commissioning will remain necessary to address
issues of wider concern to health services or the public health.
Several non-monetary interventions appear to promote participation in
research, including personal approaches by researchers or peers and the
subsequent identification of different stakeholders' concerns and
information needs.
4 6
Minimising time commitments to
trials by simplifying protocols, using research assistants for data
collection, and reducing the number of planning meetings may also help.
Nevertheless, patient recruitment can be disappointing within
participating practices,2 and many eligible patients still
fail to be recruited during consultations. Those who are recruited tend
to have more severe symptoms and different consulting patterns from the
majority,7 thereby undermining the generalisability of
findings.
Would financial incentives work any better? Financial incentives do
appear to work in general; indeed, they have encouraged general
practitioners to conduct health promotion activities in which they have
little faith.8 In research, one randomised comparison
indicated that survey response rates were incrementally related to
levels of payment.9 However, in a recent British study,
use of an alcohol screening programme in general practice was related
more to the level of training and support provided than to the offer of
a financial incentive (although this was only a £50 gift voucher) (EFS
Kaner, unpublished data). On the other hand, pharmaceutical companies
offer general practitioners often quite substantial sums for each
patient recruited into a trial, and it seems unlikely they would use
such payments if they failed to work.
What are the drawbacks of financial incentives? The use of money
to promote more intensive case finding, including identification from
computer records or the opportunistic detection of eligible patients
during consultations for unrelated reasons, could skew the
representativeness of cases drawn from the study population. For
example, dyspeptic patients identified from prescribing records may
have more chronic illness or different consulting behaviour from
incident cases or those requiring more occasional prescriptions. Pragmatic trials, where patient entry tends to depend on general practitioners' opinions about eligibility, might be more vulnerable to
misrepresentation than explanatory trials, where entry criteria are
more tightly defined. Alternatively, payments may actually improve the
generalisability of results if a higher proportion of less research
active practices participated in trials than at present. Practices
funded by regional or national initiatives to support or lead research
activities overrepresent atypical general practitioners (such as those
with research degrees) serving atypical populations (such as rural
populations).10
Personal ethical values may deter some doctors from participating in
research where payment is based on fees per patient recruited. Safeguards are required to avoid doctors pressurising patients to take
part in trials and to deter fraudulent case finding and entry.11 Fairness to other practice staff is also an
issue. Although general practitioners have overall responsibility for practice management, it seems less than fair if other staff central to
research, such as practice nurses, sometimes receive no reward for
their efforts. Furthermore, it is essential that the opportunity costs
of participating in research do not compromise other patients' quality
of care.
Given the importance of money in everyday general practice, the
use of financial incentives is seldom openly discussed Targeted financial incentives may represent an effective approach where
other means of involving general practitioners in research fail. This
is especially true while the organisational and funding infrastructure
for research is still being built in primary care. Clinical trials
represent large investments in time and resources for commissioners,
researchers, clinicians, and patients. Payments to practitioners may be
a small investment for a major return Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of
Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH3 9EW (R.Foy{at}ed.ac.uk) Centre for Cancer Epidemiology, University of Manchester,
Manchester M20 4QL Department of Primary Health Care, School of Health Sciences,
Medical School, Newcastle upon Tyne NE2 4HH
We thank Aislinn O'Dwyer of the NHS North West
Regional Office for suggesting we write about this issue.
Competing interest: RF and JP are both conducting a
trial which involves payments to general practitioners for recruiting
patients.
or "the imagination, enterprise and
investment assumptions of corner shopkeeping."1 What
effect does this have on research in primary care? And would explicit
financial incentives improve the amount and quality of primary care
research?
as if some
shame were attached to it. Money is already being paid for research in
general practice, and the NHS and other non-commercial commissioners of
research find it hard to compete with rates offered by the
pharmaceutical industry. The danger is that ad hoc funding in some
studies may jeopardise others, and commissioners of research should
openly consider the role of financial support. We still need more
information about whether and when financial incentives work, including
reports of trials that fail due to inadequate recruitment. It will also
be important to monitor the impact of incentive payments on rates and
quality of recruitment. Trialists writing up their findings should
explicitly report methods of recruitment and any financial incentives
used. This would establish a more professional context for research in
primary care and distance it from the culture of the corner shopkeeper.
the relatively quick recruitment
of trial participants. Payments may also compensate general
practitioners for the lack of external recognition they receive for
participating in other people's trials.
Jayne Parry
Brian McAvoy
© BMJ 1998
Read all Rapid Responses
What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+