Skip to main content
. 2018 May 31;13(5):e0198278. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0198278

Table 5. The MISC: Challenges and responding strategies.

Challenges Responding strategies
Launching the cohort
Underestimating number of staff required Ongoing hiring and training
High turnover of research assistants Supplementary training (time/cost implications)
Participant recruitment
Concerns of study duration Establishing nurse-liaison (maintain confidence and familiarity between involved parties)
Lack of interest
Reluctance to enroll before obtaining husband’s approval
Data collection
Notification of delivery often overlooked Daily tracking of participants approaching due dates
Same-day discharge, shortened post-delivery stays (limited time to collect information and samples at the hospital) Providing the mothers with necessary supplies and instructions on sample collection at home and arranging a pick-up the next day
Milk supply is not fully developed
Difficulty to provide milk with a pump
Blood collection (especially from infants) Recruiting specialized pediatric nurses
Technical difficulties/Parental refusal
Quality assurance Rigorous information system infrastructure
Periodic data tracking and quality check
Unanimous adaptation of pre-specified data collection and management protocols
Data collection using interviewer-administered questionnaire (resource-intensive) Relocate additional cost
Participant retention
Participant fatigue Maximize participant convenience:
Efficiency in data collection (challenging with multi-component questionnaires)
Flexibility of data collectors to commute between study sites at convenient times for participants
Missed appointments and late arrivals Reminders through direct communication at each data collection time-point
Lack of interest Maintaining communication (phone calls/messages)
Offering incentives
Involve the husbands in research details and raise their awareness
Husbands’ reluctance
Repeatedly missed appointments Obtaining other contact detail information
Repeated efforts for restoring communication
Rescheduling the infant vaccination appointment to increase convenience to the mothers (within acceptable dates for vaccinations)
Exclusion
Methodological considerations
Potential unequal distribution of confounders and inherent dissimilarities between-groups Collecting data relating to numerous potential confounders
Careful control through statistical analyses
Potential differential loss to follow-up Comparative analysis of baseline and last-observation characteristics between attired/retained participants
Limited ability to generalize the results to non-Arab residents Priority of obtaining ethnic-specific data due to current lack of evidence