The Use of Facebook in Recruiting Participants for Health Research Purposes: A Systematic Review
Abstract
Social media is a popular online tool that allows users to communicate and exchange information. It allows digital content such as pictures, videos and websites to be shared, discussed, republished and endorsed by its users, their friends and businesses. Adverts can be posted and promoted to specific target audiences by demographics such as region, age or gender. Recruiting for health research is complex with strict requirement criteria imposed on the participants. Traditional research recruitment relies on flyers, newspaper adverts, radio and television broadcasts, letters, emails, website listings, and word of mouth. These methods are potentially poor at recruiting hard to reach demographics, can be slow and expensive. Recruitment via social media, in particular Facebook, may be faster and cheaper.
The aim of this study was to systematically review the literature regarding the current use and success of Facebook to recruit participants for health research purposes.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 63.15
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 48
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Internet privacy
- Social media
- Psychology
- Systematic review
- MEDLINE
- World Wide Web
- Medicine
- Applied psychology