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Longitudinal Projects
Longitudinal projects provide collection of data over time in order to track changes and progress. Longitudinal projects are useful in the following situations:
Long Term Studies
Clinical Trials
Recruitment & Enrollment Combinations
Multi-Site Studies
It is extremely important to give much consideration to the design, development and testing of your Longitudinal Project. Understanding reporting considerations & needs is critical. Thorough testing is essential for success.
INITIAL CONSIDERATIONS
Enabling longitudinal feature allows any form or survey to be reused over the course of time and provides opportunity to designate specific instruments at specific time points (events). Longitudinal instruments eliminate the need to recreate the same form for multiple time points. Instead, the form is created once and then assigned to various time points throughout the project. Examples of forms used in longitudinal mode include:
Medications
Lab results
Adverse events forms
Basic Setup up of a Longitudinal Project:
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2. Enable Longitudinal Functionality
3. Set up User Rights, Roles, &/or DAG’s
4. Define Events (and/or) Arms
5. Designate Instruments to Events
6. Test, Test & Test
7. Setup Schedules (Optional feature- not required)
Advanced Setup of a Longitudinal Study
Two Arms and 3 Events are shown here, but you can have as many Arms & Events as you want / need for your study
Expand here for Advance process & details:
Additional Considerations
Best practice to always add Record ID to every arm to prevent REDCap issues, especially if using surveys
Create a "single landing page" with just Record ID. Can be invisible to user with a "Thanks for Participating Page" with Submit to continue.
Actions that can cause data loss in Longitudinal Projects:
Deleting Events
Deleting Arms
Decoupling Forms from Events
If you create additional forms once project is in Production, need to request REDCap support to link forms to Events.
Give much consideration to User Rights. If you want to segregate data based on location but have a form that is common to both sites, a user with rights to that form will see data from both sites.
Branching logic in a Longitudinal Project must identify the Event, Arm and the field name.
Classical Branching Equation:
[field1] = '3'
Longitudinal Branching Equation:
Can cross both forms and events, so need to indicate event and field
[event_3][field1] = '3'
Survey Expiration
Is server time, not what is on your computer
Survey expiration takes all copies of the survey offline.
Warning: If you have survey that is used multiple times in a longitudinal survey if you expire the survey after the first event, be aware that it will expire all the surveys in following events
When defining Events it is important to think about the days offset and use an accurate representation in case you ever want to use scheduling