Literature DB >> 16117249

Feasibility study for collecting alcohol and other drug use data among secondary school students: a web-based survey approach.

Sean Esteban McCabe1, Carol J Boyd, Amy Young, Scott Crawford.   

Abstract

This study examined the feasibility of using a Web-based survey to collect alcohol and other drug use data from secondary school students in an urban school district in the Midwest. A Web-based survey was self-administered by a random sample of 6th through 11th grade students in the spring of 2002. The final sample consisted of 1,536 secondary school students (781 women and 755 men). The sample was 57% White, 40% African American, and 3% from other racial and ethnic groups. Several indicators of data quality were examined including response rate, absenteeism, refusals, substantive data, and data processing time. The study achieved a response rate of 89.1%. The results of the present study provide evidence that a Web-based survey can be successfully implemented in an economically and racially diverse urban sample of secondary students. While researchers conducting survey research within secondary schools should consider using Web-based survey approaches, additional research is needed to compare Web-based surveys to more traditional approaches to collecting data.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 16117249     DOI: 10.2190/TGMB-0X3Q-6PV1-9A6W

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Drug Educ        ISSN: 0047-2379


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