Abstract Background 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. Methods 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. Results 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 survey...
BackgroundEvidence is needed regarding effective incentive strategies to increase clinician survey r...
Background: Patient experience surveys are important tools for improving the quality of cancer servi...
Low response rates, especially among physicians, are a common problem in mailed survey research. We ...
Background: Postal self-completion questionnaires offer one of the least expensive modes of collec...
BACKGROUND: Patient surveys typically have variable response rates between organizations, leading to...
Background: Improving questionnaire response rates is an everlasting issue for research. Today, the...
BackgroundData from surveys of patient care experiences are a cornerstone of public reporting and pa...
Abstract Background Healthcare professional response rates to postal questionnaires are declining an...
Background: Mail-out survey studies are becoming more prevalent in the head and neck literature. Th...
The mail survey is still the preferred research tool for the mature consumer population and question...
Despite their low cost, the use of email invitations to distribute surveys to medical practitioners ...
Abstract Background Postal questionnaires are widely used to collect outcome data on participants. H...
Low response rates, especially among health-care professionals, are a common problem in mailed surve...
Achieving a high rate of response to a mail survey is important from several viewpoints. Aside from ...
Abstract Background Postal surveys are a frequently used method of data collection in health service...
BackgroundEvidence is needed regarding effective incentive strategies to increase clinician survey r...
Background: Patient experience surveys are important tools for improving the quality of cancer servi...
Low response rates, especially among physicians, are a common problem in mailed survey research. We ...
Background: Postal self-completion questionnaires offer one of the least expensive modes of collec...
BACKGROUND: Patient surveys typically have variable response rates between organizations, leading to...
Background: Improving questionnaire response rates is an everlasting issue for research. Today, the...
BackgroundData from surveys of patient care experiences are a cornerstone of public reporting and pa...
Abstract Background Healthcare professional response rates to postal questionnaires are declining an...
Background: Mail-out survey studies are becoming more prevalent in the head and neck literature. Th...
The mail survey is still the preferred research tool for the mature consumer population and question...
Despite their low cost, the use of email invitations to distribute surveys to medical practitioners ...
Abstract Background Postal questionnaires are widely used to collect outcome data on participants. H...
Low response rates, especially among health-care professionals, are a common problem in mailed surve...
Achieving a high rate of response to a mail survey is important from several viewpoints. Aside from ...
Abstract Background Postal surveys are a frequently used method of data collection in health service...
BackgroundEvidence is needed regarding effective incentive strategies to increase clinician survey r...
Background: Patient experience surveys are important tools for improving the quality of cancer servi...
Low response rates, especially among physicians, are a common problem in mailed survey research. We ...