Achieving a 96.6 percent follow-up rate in a longitudinal study of drug abusers.
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Regulatory Issues Encountered when Conducting Longitudinal Substance Abuse ResearchStudy designs and evaluation models for emergency department public health research.Intention-to-treat meets missing data: implications of alternate strategies for analyzing clinical trials dataHow Feasible is Multiple Time Point Web-Based Data Collection with Individuals Experiencing Street Homelessness?Telephone-based assessments to minimize missing data in longitudinal depression trials: a project IMPACTS study reportHidden data for research ethicists: an introduction to the concept and a series of papersOPERATIONAL LESSONS FROM THE PATHWAYS TO DESISTANCE PROJECT.Modifiable risk factors of ecstasy use: risk perception, current dependence, perceived control, and depression.The attitudes of females in drug court toward additional safeguards in HIV prevention research.Innovative approaches to cohort retention in a community-based HIV/STI prevention trial for socially marginalized Peruvian young adults.Risk factors associated with Hepatitis C among female substance users enrolled in community-based HIV prevention studiesPredictors of follow-up completion among runaway substance-abusing adolescents and their primary caretakers.Compensation effects on clinical trial data collection in opioid-dependent young adults.Peer-delivered interventions reduce HIV risk behaviors among out-of-treatment drug abusers.Feasibility and effectiveness of HIV prevention among wives of heavy drinkers in Bangalore, IndiaEngagement and retention of suicide attempters in clinical research: challenges and solutions.Predictors of high rates of suicidal ideation among drug usersRetaining Participants in Outpatient and Community-Based Health Studies: Researchers and Participants in Their Own Words.Recruiting and retaining mobile young injection drug users in a longitudinal study.Factors associated with study attrition among HIV-infected risky drinkers in St. Petersburg, Russia.What Works? An Empirical Perspective on How to Retain Youth in Longitudinal Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and Substance Risk Reduction StudiesEffects of drop out in a longitudinal study of musculoskeletal disorders.The Use of Technology in Participant Tracking and Study Retention: Lessons Learned From a Clinical Trials Network Study.Maintaining Superior Follow-Up Rates in a Longitudinal Study: Experiences from the College Life Study.Technological aids for improving longitudinal research on substance use disorders.Using facebook to maximize follow-up response rates in a longitudinal study of adults who use methamphetamineProject neighborhoods in action: an HIV-related intervention project targeting drug abusers in Washington, DC.Marijuana Use and Its Association with Participation, Navigation, and Enrollment in Health Research among African Americans.Measures of outcome for stimulant trials: ACTTION recommendations and research agenda.Predictors of Attrition in a Cohort Study of HIV Infection and Methamphetamine DependenceEthical issues in mental health research: the case for community engagementTen years later: Locating and interviewing children of drug abusersIssues in designing and implementing a Spanish-language multi-site clinical trialHigher magnitude cash payments improve research follow-up rates without increasing drug use or perceived coercionStudy retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach population.Establishing the Melbourne Injecting Drug User Cohort Study (MIX): rationale, methods, and baseline and twelve-month follow-up resultsPersistence pays off: follow-up methods for difficult-to-track longitudinal samples.Utilization patterns and correlates of retention among clients of the needle exchange program in Baltimore, Maryland.Effective Strategies for Maintaining Research Participation in Clinical Trials.The aftermath of public housing relocations: relationships between changes in local socioeconomic conditions and depressive symptoms in a cohort of adult relocaters.
P2860
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P2860
Achieving a 96.6 percent follow-up rate in a longitudinal study of drug abusers.
description
1996 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1996年の論文
@ja
1996年学术文章
@wuu
1996年学术文章
@zh
1996年学术文章
@zh-cn
1996年学术文章
@zh-hans
1996年学术文章
@zh-my
1996年学术文章
@zh-sg
1996年學術文章
@yue
1996年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Achieving a 96.6 percent follow-up rate in a longitudinal study of drug abusers.
@en
Achieving a 96.6 percent follow-up rate in a longitudinal study of drug abusers.
@nl
type
label
Achieving a 96.6 percent follow-up rate in a longitudinal study of drug abusers.
@en
Achieving a 96.6 percent follow-up rate in a longitudinal study of drug abusers.
@nl
prefLabel
Achieving a 96.6 percent follow-up rate in a longitudinal study of drug abusers.
@en
Achieving a 96.6 percent follow-up rate in a longitudinal study of drug abusers.
@nl
P2093
P1476
Achieving a 96.6 percent follow-up rate in a longitudinal study of drug abusers.
@en
P2093
Ben-Abdallah A
Claverie D
Compton WM
Cottler LB
P304
P356
10.1016/0376-8716(96)01254-9
P577
1996-07-01T00:00:00Z