scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1046/J.1360-0443.2001.969131911.X |
P698 | PubMed publication ID | 11672496 |
P2093 | author name string | Dwyer R | |
Fry C | |||
P433 | issue | 9 | |
P407 | language of work or name | English | Q1860 |
P304 | page(s) | 1319-1325 | |
P577 | publication date | 2001-09-01 | |
P1433 | published in | Addiction | Q4681106 |
P1476 | title | For love or money? An exploratory study of why injecting drug users participate in research | |
P478 | volume | 96 |
Q36469165 | "We're checking them out": Indigenous and non-Indigenous research participants' accounts of deciding to be involved in research |
Q50132049 | "We're giving you something so we get something in return": Perspectives on research participation and compensation among people living with HIV who use drugs |
Q47347215 | 'I Got it off my Chest': An Examination of how Research Participation Improved the Mental Health of Women Engaging in Transactional Sex. |
Q46927501 | 'That was helpful … no one has talked to me about that before': Research participation as a therapeutic activity |
Q37455079 | A Review of Paying Research Participants: It's Time to Move Beyond the ethical Debate |
Q35977926 | A qualitative analysis of peer recruitment pressures in respondent driven sampling: Are risks above the ethical limit? |
Q39222456 | A qualitative study of recruitment barriers, motivators, and community-based strategies for increasing clinical trials participation among rural and urban populations. |
Q44836258 | A replicable model for achieving over 90% follow-up rates in longitudinal studies of substance abusers |
Q30558791 | Accessing health services through the back door: a qualitative interview study investigating reasons why people participate in health research in Canada |
Q48447836 | Addiction and autonomy: can addicted people consent to the prescription of their drug of addiction? |
Q47808137 | Adult ADHD Is Associated With Gambling Severity and Psychiatric Comorbidity Among Treatment-Seeking Problem Gamblers |
Q37158270 | Al-Anon newcomers: benefits of continuing attendance for six months |
Q36594545 | Altruism and peer-led HIV prevention targeting heroin and cocaine users |
Q80419590 | Attitudes of health-care providers towards research with newborn babies |
Q36802206 | Barriers and opportunities for recruitment for nonintervention studies on HIV risk: perspectives of street drug users |
Q35938163 | Compensating clinical trial participants from limited resource settings in internationally sponsored clinical trials: a proposal. |
Q47867618 | Concealment and fabrication by experienced research subjects |
Q35857043 | Contingency management for cocaine treatment: cash vs. vouchers |
Q39604120 | Development of a "survival" guide for substance users in Harlem, New York City |
Q38626367 | Diffracting addicting binaries: An analysis of personal accounts of alcohol and other drug 'addiction'. |
Q37358442 | Effective Strategies for Maintaining Research Participation in Clinical Trials |
Q58743347 | Engaging Stakeholders to Develop a Patient-centered Research Agenda: Lessons Learned From the Research Action for Health Network (REACHnet) |
Q30227101 | Enhancing HIV vaccine trial consent preparedness among street drug users |
Q55073486 | Ethical Issues in Research Involving Participants With Opioid Use Disorder. |
Q56781466 | Ethical considerations in HIV/AIDS biobehavioral surveys that use respondent-driven sampling: illustrations from Lebanon |
Q57986241 | Evading and embracing normality: estrangement and ambivalence in the accounts of methamphetamine consumers |
Q36079296 | Factors associated with willingness to participate in a pharmacologic addiction treatment clinical trial among people who use drugs |
Q56890577 | Field engagement further facilitates hepatitis B vaccination completion |
Q39810233 | French academic's views on financial compensation of participants |
Q57986246 | Governing drug use otherwise: For an ethics of care |
Q36778313 | Higher magnitude cash payments improve research follow-up rates without increasing drug use or perceived coercion |
Q30886297 | Influences upon willingness to participate in schizophrenia research: an analysis of narrative data from 63 people with schizophrenia |
Q56890698 | Integrating enhanced hepatitis C testing and counselling in research |
Q38200696 | Is there a problem with the status quo? Debating the need for standalone ethical guidelines for research with people who use alcohol and other drugs |
Q36073293 | Key Stakeholders' Perceptions of Motivators for Research Participation Among Individuals Who Are Incarcerated |
Q57988773 | Learning From Research Participants |
Q42643983 | Maintaining dignity and managing stigma in the interview encounter: the challenge of paid-for participation |
Q37288069 | Measuring principal substance of abuse in comorbid patients for clinical research |
Q39931556 | Mental health symptoms among street-based psychostimulant injectors in Sydney's Kings Cross |
Q48577032 | Methodological, ethical, and legal considerations in drug court research |
Q35836541 | Motivational assessment of non-treatment buprenorphine research participation in heroin dependent individuals |
Q35430679 | Paying research participants: a study of current practices in Australia. |
Q37435474 | Paying substance abusers in research studies: where does the money go? |
Q35755040 | Perceptions of reimbursement for clinical trial participation |
Q49820643 | Personal Control Over Decisions to Participate in Research by Persons With Histories of Both Substance Use Disorders and Criminal Justice Supervision. |
Q37489753 | Pharmacological research on addictions: a framework for ethical and policy considerations |
Q46984943 | Potential benefits of using ecological momentary assessment to study high-risk polydrug use. |
Q47253582 | Psychological wellbeing of Turkish university students with physical impairments: an evaluation within the stress-vulnerability paradigm |
Q40276442 | Reasons for participation and non-participation in a randomized controlled trial: postal questionnaire surveys of women eligible for TOMBOLA (Trial Of Management of Borderline and Other Low-Grade Abnormal smears). |
Q28748157 | Regulatory Issues Encountered when Conducting Longitudinal Substance Abuse Research |
Q43486872 | Research participation and internal normativity: understanding why people participate |
Q55313693 | Research participation as work: comparing the perspectives of researchers and economically marginalized populations. |
Q51928946 | Research with participants in problem experience: challenges and strategies. |
Q47370675 | Researching Mental Health in Minority Ethnic Communities: Reflections on Recruitment |
Q47757048 | Successful recruitment to a study of first-episode psychosis by clinicians: a qualitative account of outcomes and influences on process |
Q47871707 | The Swedish physical activity and fitness cohort born in 1958 - dropout analysis and overview at 36-year follow-up. |
Q42975011 | The contribution of injecting drug users in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane to rising benzodiazepine use in Australia 2000 to 2006. |
Q36003852 | The ethics of community-based research with people who use drugs: results of a scoping review |
Q37455084 | The ethics of paying drug users who participate in research: a review and practical recommendations |
Q57660332 | The ethics of reimbursing injecting drug users for public health research interviews: what price are we prepared to pay? |
Q35426371 | The influence of risk and monetary payment on the research participation decision making process |
Q37313110 | The issue of consent in research that administers drugs of addiction to addicted persons. |
Q36909172 | Understanding motivations to participate in an observational research study: Why do patients enroll? |
Q37139404 | Value of recruitment strategies used in a primary care practice-based trial |
Q46169340 | What motivates women to take part in clinical and basic science endometriosis research? |
Q37974104 | What women who use drugs have to say about ethical research: findings of an exploratory qualitative study |
Q33282907 | When "no" might not quite mean "no"; the importance of informed and meaningful non-consent: results from a survey of individuals refusing participation in a health-related research project |
Q35200934 | Who's doing the math? Are we really compensating research participants? |
Q35200966 | Why do we pay? A national survey of investigators and IRB chairpersons |
Search more.