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Active Parent Consent for Health Surveys With Urban Middle School Students: Processes and Outcomes*
Authors:Molly Secor-Turner PhD  MS   RN  Renee Sieving PhD  MSN   RNC  Rachel Widome PhD  MHS  Shari Plowman MPH  Eric Vanden Berk PhD
Affiliation:1. Deputy Director, (sievi001@umn.edu), Healthy Youth Development-Prevention Research and Training Center, Division of Pediatrics, Medical School;2. Associate Professor, Center for Adolescent Nursing, School of Nursing, University of Minnesota, 5-140 Weaver-Densford Hall, 308 Harvard Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455;3. Core Investigator, (rachel.widome@va.gov), Center for Chronic Disease Outcomes Research, Minneapolis VA Medical Center;4. Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, One Veterans Drive (152/2E), Minneapolis, MN 55417;5. Senior Evaluator, (plow0014@umn.edu), Healthy Youth Development Prevention Research Center, University of Minnesota, 717 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55414;6. Evaluation and Testing Specialist, (eric.vandenberk@mpls.k12.mn.us), Research, Evaluation and Assessment, Minneapolis Public Schools, 807 NE Broadway, Minneapolis, MN 55413
Abstract:BACKGROUND: To achieve high participation rates and a representative sample, active parent consent procedures require a significant investment of study resources. The purpose of this article is to describe processes and outcomes of utilizing active parent consent procedures with sixth-grade students from urban, ethnically diverse, economically disadvantaged K-8 public schools involved in an evaluation of a middle school service-learning program. METHODS: As part of the evaluation of the Lead Peace-Plus service-learning program, active parent consent was obtained for participation in school-based health surveys conducted with sixth graders in 3 schools. To achieve acceptable rates of parent permission, we employed multiple procedures including regular communication with school staff, incentives for involved schools and teachers, a multipronged approach for reaching parents, and direct encouragement of students to return forms through repeated classroom visits, individual and classroom incentives. We used Fisher's exact tests to compare selected characteristics among students whose parents weren't reached, those whose parents refused, and those whose parents consented to survey participation. RESULTS: We achieved a parent response rate of 94.6% among sixth-grade students. No significant differences in student gender, race/ethnicity, school, or free/reduced lunch status were identified across parent consent status groups. Rates of absenteeism were significantly higher (p = .03) among students whose parents weren't reached compared to other groups. CONCLUSIONS: Employing a multifaceted active parent consent campaign can result in high rates of parental response with limited sampling bias among an urban, ethnically diverse and economically disadvantaged group of middle school students.
Keywords:adolescent health  child and evaluation  research
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