

The program
Researchers developed a program to increase participation by educating nurses on how to approach patients and discuss clinical trials as a routine treatment option. In the first year, 30 nurses will be interviewed and another 100 will be surveyed to discover the key factors that may prevent them from sharing information with patients about clinical trials. Based on what nurses report, researchers will develop a web-based program, called Oncology Nurse IMPACT, to address those barriers in a series of teaching videos. A group of 1,030 nurses, recruited nationally from the Oncology Nurses Society’s 30,000 members, will participate in testing the intervention. Half will use Oncology Nurse IMPACT tailored to each nurse’s concerns. The other half will receive educational materials in the form of online text about clinical trials. Results of the two approaches will be compared to determine which method worked best to increase discussions about trials between nurses and patients. The group receiving text information will then have the opportunity to also use Oncology Nurse IMPACT after the study is completed. The work follows earlier studies that analyzed reservations doctors and patients have about clinical trials, said Meropol, the Dr. Lester E. Coleman, Jr., Professor of Cancer Research and Therapeutics at University Hospitals Case Medical Center and Case Western Reserve. Researchers found doctors and patients have gaps in what they know about clinical trials, as well as some negative attitudes that prevent more patients from participating. Among the concerns patients reported were:- A lack of awareness about clinical trials.
- A belief that trials should only be used as a last resort.
- A fear of side effects.
- A fear they will receive a placebo instead of a treatment.
- A concern that a computer, not their physician, will select their treatment on a trial.