Background: In the context of declining levels of participation, understanding differences between participants and non-participants in health surveys is increasingly important for reliable measurement of health-related behaviors and their social differentials. This study compared participants and non-participants of the Finnish Health 2000 survey, and participants and a representative sample of the target population, in terms of alcohol-related harms (hospitalizations and deaths) and all-cause mortality. Methods: We individually linked 6,127 survey participants and 1,040 non-participants, aged 30–79, and a register-based population sample (n = 496,079) to 12 years of subsequent administrative hospital discharge and mortality data. W...
Aim: Response rates in health surveys have diminished over the last two decades, making it difficul...
Background: Social differences in mortality have increased in high income countries, but the causes ...
Aims We aim to adjust for potential non-participation bias in the prevalence of heavy alcohol consu...
Background: In the context of declining levels of participation, understanding differences between p...
Background: In the context of declining levels of participation, understanding differences between...
Aims: It is becoming increasingly possible to obtain additional information about health survey part...
Introduction: Decreasing participation levels in health surveys pose a threat to the validity of est...
OBJECTIVE: To examine difference in mortality between postal survey non-respondents and respondents....
Health surveys are an important resource for monitoring population health, but selective nonresponse...
Health surveys are an important resource for monitoring population health, but selective nonresponse...
Health surveys are an important resource for monitoring population health, but selective nonresponse...
Aims: It is becoming increasingly possible to obtain additional information about health survey par...
Introduction Decreasing participation levels in health surveys pose a threat to the validity of esti...
Abstract — Aims: To assess to what extent alcohol-related mortality has changed by age, sex and educ...
Introduction Decreasing participation levels in health surveys pose a threat to the validity of esti...
Aim: Response rates in health surveys have diminished over the last two decades, making it difficul...
Background: Social differences in mortality have increased in high income countries, but the causes ...
Aims We aim to adjust for potential non-participation bias in the prevalence of heavy alcohol consu...
Background: In the context of declining levels of participation, understanding differences between p...
Background: In the context of declining levels of participation, understanding differences between...
Aims: It is becoming increasingly possible to obtain additional information about health survey part...
Introduction: Decreasing participation levels in health surveys pose a threat to the validity of est...
OBJECTIVE: To examine difference in mortality between postal survey non-respondents and respondents....
Health surveys are an important resource for monitoring population health, but selective nonresponse...
Health surveys are an important resource for monitoring population health, but selective nonresponse...
Health surveys are an important resource for monitoring population health, but selective nonresponse...
Aims: It is becoming increasingly possible to obtain additional information about health survey par...
Introduction Decreasing participation levels in health surveys pose a threat to the validity of esti...
Abstract — Aims: To assess to what extent alcohol-related mortality has changed by age, sex and educ...
Introduction Decreasing participation levels in health surveys pose a threat to the validity of esti...
Aim: Response rates in health surveys have diminished over the last two decades, making it difficul...
Background: Social differences in mortality have increased in high income countries, but the causes ...
Aims We aim to adjust for potential non-participation bias in the prevalence of heavy alcohol consu...