de Koning Rosaline, Egiz Abdullah, Kotecha Jay, Ciuculete Ana Catinca, Ooi Setthasorn Zhi Yang, Bankole Nourou Dine Adeniran, Erhabor Joshua, Higginbotham George, Khan Mehdi, Dalle David Ulrich, Sichimba Dawin, Bandyopadhyay Soham, Kanmounye Ulrick Sidney
Department of Research, Association of Future African Neurosurgeons, Yaoundé, Cameroon.
Front Surg. 2021 Aug 12;8:690680. doi: 10.3389/fsurg.2021.690680. eCollection 2021.
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a surge in research activity while restricting data collection methods, leading to a rise in survey-based studies. Anecdotal evidence suggests this increase in neurosurgical survey dissemination has led to a phenomenon of survey fatigue, characterized by decreased response rates and reducing the quality of data. This paper aims to analyze the effect of COVID-19 on neurosurgery surveys and their response rates, and suggest strategies for improving survey data collection. A search was conducted on March 20, 2021, on Medline and EMBASE. This included the terms "neurosurgery," "cranial surgery," "spine surgery," and "survey" and identified surveys written in English, on a neurosurgical topic, distributed to neurosurgeons, trainees, and medical students. Results were screened by two authors according to these inclusion criteria, and included articles were used for data extraction, univariable, and bivariable analysis with Fisher's exact-test, Wilcoxon rank-sum test, and Spearman's correlation. We included 255 articles in our analysis, 32.3% of which were published during the COVID-19 pandemic. Surveys had an average of 25.6 (95% CI = 22.5-28.8) questions and were mostly multiple choice (78.8%). They were disseminated primarily by email (75.3%, 95% CI = 70.0-80.6%) and there was a significant increase in dissemination social media during the pandemic (OR = 3.50, 95% CI = 1.30-12.0). COVID-19 surveys were distributed to more geographical regions than pre-pandemic surveys (2.1 vs. 1.5, = 0.01) and had higher total responses (247.0 vs. 206.4, = 0.01), but lower response rates (34.5 vs. 51.0%, < 0.001) than pre-COVID-19 surveys. The rise in neurosurgical survey distribution during the COVID-19 pandemic has led to survey fatigue, reduced response rates, and data collection quality. We advocate for population targeting to avoid over-researching, collaboration between research teams to minimize duplicate surveys, and communication with respondents to convey study importance, and we suggest further strategies to improve response rates in neurosurgery survey data collection.
新冠疫情期间研究活动激增,但数据收集方法受限,导致基于调查的研究增多。轶事证据表明,神经外科调查传播的这种增加导致了调查疲劳现象,其特征是回复率下降和数据质量降低。本文旨在分析新冠疫情对神经外科调查及其回复率的影响,并提出提高调查数据收集的策略。2021年3月20日在医学期刊数据库(Medline)和荷兰医学文摘数据库(EMBASE)上进行了检索。检索词包括“神经外科”“颅脑手术”“脊柱手术”和“调查”,并确定了以英文撰写的、关于神经外科主题、分发给神经外科医生、实习生和医学生的调查。两位作者根据这些纳入标准对结果进行筛选,纳入的文章用于数据提取、单变量和双变量分析,采用Fisher精确检验、Wilcoxon秩和检验和Spearman相关性分析。我们的分析纳入了255篇文章,其中32.3%是在新冠疫情期间发表的。调查平均有25.6个(95%置信区间=22.5-28.8)问题,大多为多项选择题(78.8%)。它们主要通过电子邮件传播(75.3%,95%置信区间=70.0-80.6%),疫情期间社交媒体传播显著增加(比值比=3.50,95%置信区间=1.30-12.0)。与疫情前的调查相比,新冠疫情调查分布到更多地理区域(2.1对1.5,P=0.01),总回复数更高(247.0对206.4,P=0.01),但回复率更低(34.5%对51.0%,P<0.001)。新冠疫情期间神经外科调查分布的增加导致了调查疲劳、回复率降低和数据收集质量下降。我们主张针对特定人群以避免过度研究,研究团队之间开展合作以尽量减少重复调查,并与受访者沟通以传达研究的重要性,我们还提出了进一步提高神经外科调查数据收集回复率的策略。