Research Triangle Institute, Washington, DC, USA.
BMC Med Res Methodol. 2010 Jul 14;10:65. doi: 10.1186/1471-2288-10-65.
In recent years, response rates to telephone surveys have declined. Online surveys may miss many older and poorer adults. Mailed surveys may have promise in securing higher response rates.
In a pilot study, 1200 breast, prostate and colon patients, randomly selected from the Pennsylvania Cancer Registry, were sent surveys in the mail. Incentive amount ($3 vs. $5) and length of the survey (10 pages vs. 16 pages) were randomly assigned.
Overall, there was a high response rate (AAPOR RR4 = 64%). Neither the amount of the incentive, nor the length of the survey affected the response rate significantly. Colon cancer surveys were returned at a significantly lower rate (RR4 = 54%), than breast or prostate surveys (RR4 = 71%, and RR4 = 67%, respectively; p < .001 for both comparisons). There were no significant interactions among cancer type, length of survey and incentive amount in their effects on response likelihood.
Mailed surveys may provide a suitable alternative option for survey-based research with cancer patients.
近年来,电话调查的回复率有所下降。在线调查可能会遗漏许多年龄较大和较贫困的成年人。邮寄调查可能有希望获得更高的回复率。
在一项试点研究中,从宾夕法尼亚癌症登记处随机选择了 1200 名乳腺癌、前列腺癌和结肠癌患者,通过邮件向他们发送了调查。激励金额($3 与 $5)和调查长度(10 页与 16 页)随机分配。
总体而言,回复率很高(AAPOR RR4 = 64%)。激励金额和调查长度都没有显著影响回复率。结肠癌调查的回复率明显较低(RR4 = 54%),低于乳腺癌或前列腺癌调查(RR4 = 71%和 RR4 = 67%,两者比较均 P<.001)。在癌症类型、调查长度和激励金额对回复可能性的影响方面,没有显著的相互作用。
邮寄调查可能是癌症患者基于调查的研究的一种合适的替代选择。