Duszynski Thomas J, Fadel William, Dixon Brian, Yiannoutsos Constantin T, Halverson Paul, Menachemi Nir
Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
Regenstrief Institute, Inc, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Apr 22;24(1):1113. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-18550-6.
Multiple modalities and frequencies of contact are needed to maximize recruitment in many public health surveys. The purpose of this analysis is to characterize respondents to a statewide SARS-CoV-2 testing study whose participation followed either postcard, phone outreach or electronic means of invitation. In addition, we examine how participant characteristics differ based upon the number of contacts needed to elicit participation.
This is a cross-sectional analysis of survey data collected from participants who were randomly selected to represent Indiana residents and were invited to be tested for Covid-19 in April 2020. Participants received invitations via postcard, text/emails, and/or robocalls/texts based upon available contact information. The modality, and frequency of contacts, that prompted participation was determined by when the notification was sent and when the participant responded and subsequently registered to participate in the study. Chi square analyses were used to determine differences between groups and significant findings were analyzed using multinomial logistic regression.
Respondents included 3,658 individuals and were stratified by postcards (7.9%), text/emails (26.5%), and robocalls/text (65.7%) with 19.7% registering after 1 contact, 47.9% after 2 contacts, and 32.4% after 3 contacts encouraging participation. Females made up 54.6% of the sample and responded at a higher rate for postcards (8.2% vs. 7.5%) and text/emails (28.1 vs. 24.6%) as compared to males (χ = 7.43, p = 0.025). Compared to males, females responded at a higher percentage after 1 contact (21.4 vs. 17.9%, χ = 7.6, p = 0.023). Those over 60 years responded most often after 2 contacts (χ = 27.5, p < 0.001) when compared to others at younger age groups. In regression analysis, participant sex (p = 0.036) age (p = 0.005), educational attainment (p = < 0.0001), and being motivated by "free testing" (p = 0.036) were correlated with participation in the prevalence study.
Researchers should be aware that the modality of contact as well as the number of prompts used could influence differential participation in public health studies. Our findings can inform researchers developing studies that rely on selective participation by study subjects. We explore how to increase participation within targeted demographic groups using specific modalities and examining frequency of contact.
在许多公共卫生调查中,需要多种接触方式和频率来最大限度地招募参与者。本分析的目的是描述一项全州范围的SARS-CoV-2检测研究的受访者特征,这些受访者通过明信片、电话 outreach 或电子邀请方式参与研究。此外,我们还研究了根据促使参与所需的接触次数,参与者特征如何不同。
这是一项对从随机选择以代表印第安纳州居民的参与者收集的调查数据的横断面分析,这些参与者于2020年4月被邀请进行新冠病毒检测。参与者根据可用的联系信息通过明信片、短信/电子邮件和/或自动语音电话/短信收到邀请。促使参与的接触方式和频率由通知发送时间以及参与者回复并随后注册参与研究的时间确定。使用卡方分析来确定组间差异,并使用多项逻辑回归分析显著结果。
受访者包括3658人,按明信片(7.9%)、短信/电子邮件(26.5%)和自动语音电话/短信(65.7%)进行分层,19.7%的人在1次接触后注册,47.9%在2次接触后注册,32.4%在3次接触后注册以鼓励参与。女性占样本的54.6%,与男性相比,明信片(8.2%对7.5%)和短信/电子邮件(28.1对24.6%)的回复率更高(χ = 7.43,p = 0.025)。与男性相比,女性在1次接触后的回复百分比更高(21.4%对17.9%,χ = 7.6,p = 0.023)。与其他较年轻年龄组相比,60岁以上的人在2次接触后回复最为频繁(χ = 27.5,p < 0.001)。在回归分析中,参与者的性别(p = 0.036)、年龄(p = 0.005)、教育程度(p = < 0.0001)以及受“免费检测”激励(p = 0.036)与参与患病率研究相关。
研究人员应意识到接触方式以及使用的提示次数可能会影响公共卫生研究中的差异参与。我们的发现可为开展依赖研究对象选择性参与的研究的研究人员提供参考。我们探索如何使用特定方式并检查接触频率来增加目标人群中的参与度。