A call to address structural barriers to Hispanic/Latino representation in clinical trials on Alzheimer's disease and related dementias: A micro‐meso‐macro perspective

Author:

Aranda María P.12ORCID,Marquez David X.34,Gallagher‐Thompson Dolores5,Pérez Adriana6,Rojas Julio C.7,Hill Carl V.8,Reyes Yarissa9,Dilworth‐Anderson Peggye10,Portacolone Elena11

Affiliation:

1. University of Southern California Alzheimer's Disease Research Center Los Angeles California USA

2. USC Suzanne Dworak‐Peck School of Social Work Edward R. Roybal Institute on Aging University of Southern California USC Montgomery Ross Fisher Building Los Angeles California USA

3. Department of Kinesiology and Nutrition University of Illinois Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

4. Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center Chicago Illinois USA

5. Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences Stanford University School of Medicine Palo Alto California USA

6. Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

7. Memory and Aging Center UCSF Weill Institute for Neurosciences University of California San Francisco Memory and Aging Center San Francisco California USA

8. Chief of Diversity Equity and Inclusion Alzheimer's Association Chicago Illinois USA

9. Director of Diversity Equity and Inclusion Alzheimer's Association Chicago Illinois USA

10. Health Policy and Management Gillings School of Global Public Health 1104 D McGavran Greenberg, University of North Carolina—Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

11. Institute for Health and Aging University of California San Francisco Philip Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies University of California San Francisco San Francisco California USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionThis perspective paper addresses the US Hispanic/Latino (herein, Latino) experience with regards to a significant public health concern—the underrepresentation of Latino persons in Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (AD/ADRD) clinical trials. Latino individuals are at increased risk for AD/ADRD, experience higher disease burden, and low receipt of care and services. We present a novel theoretical framework—the Micro‐Meso‐Macro Framework for Diversifying AD/ADRD Trial Recruitment—which considers multi‐level barriers and their impact on Latino trial recruitment.MethodsBased on a review of the peer‐reviewed literature and our lived experience with the Latino community, we drew from our interdisciplinary expertise in health equity and disparities research, Latino studies, social work, nursing, political economy, medicine, public health, and clinical AD/ADRD trials. We discuss factors likely to impede or accelerate Latino representation, and end with a call for action and recommendations for a bold path forward.ResultsIn the 200+ clinical trials conducted with over 70,000 US Americans, Latino participants comprise a fraction of AD/ADRD trial samples. Efforts to recruit Latino participants typically address individual‐ and family‐level factors (micro‐level) such as language, cultural beliefs, knowledge of aging and memory loss, limited awareness of research, and logistical considerations. Scientific efforts to understand recruitment barriers largely remain at this level, resulting in diminished attention to upstream institutional‐ and policy‐level barriers, where decisions around scientific policies and funding allocations are ultimately made. These structural barriers are comprised of inadequacies or misalignments in trial budgets, study protocols, workforce competencies, healthcare‐related barriers, criteria for reviewing and approving clinical trial funding, criteria for disseminating findings, etiological focus and social determinants of health, among others.ConclusionFuture scientific work should apply and test the Micro‐Meso‐Macro Framework for Diversifying AD/ADRD Trial Recruitment to examine structural recruitment barriers for historically underrepresented groups in AD/ADRD research and care.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical)

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