| Literature DB >> 28728603 |
Sarah Cotterill1, Kelly Howells2, Sarah Rhodes3, Peter Bower2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Retention of participants in cohort studies is important for validity. One way to promote retention is by sending a persuasive cover letter with surveys. The study aimed to compare the effectiveness of a covering letter containing social pressure with a standard covering letter on retention in a health cohort study. Social pressure involves persuading people to behave in a certain way by the promise that their actions will be made know to others. We implemented a mild form of social pressure, where the recipient was told that information about whether they responded to the current survey would be noted by the research team and printed on future correspondence from the research team to the recipient.Entities:
Keywords: Embedded; General practice; Health behaviour; Health cohort study; Primary care; Questionnaire design; Randomised controlled trial; Social pressure
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28728603 PMCID: PMC5520383 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-2090-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Flow chart of participants in the host study and embedded study
Fig. 2Consort flow diagram
Participant characteristics and health status at baseline, by group
| Social pressure intervention | Control | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender ( | ||
| Male n (%) | 993 (46) | 1027 (47) |
| Age ( | ||
| Mean (SD) | 74.9 (6.9) | 74.7 (6.7) |
| Number of study participants in household ( | ||
| 1 n (%) | 1821 (82) | 1821 (82) |
| Current home status ( | ||
| Lives alone n (%) | 828 (38) | 745 (35) |
| Ethnicity ( | ||
| White British n (%) | 2044 (95) | 2070 (96) |
| Education ( | ||
| No qualifications n (%) | 1012 (50) | 991 (49) |
| How often help is needed with reading materials ( | ||
| Never/Rarely n (%) | 1699 (80) | 1693 (80) |
| Quality of life (from WHOQOL) ( | ||
| Very poor/poor/neutral n (%) | 611 (29) | 612 (29) |
| Satisfaction with health (from WHOQOL) ( | ||
| Very dissatisfied/dissatisfied/neutral n (%) | 1011 (48) | 1010 (47) |
| Number of long-term conditions (using BAYLISS) ( | ||
| Mean (SD) | 5.4 (3.1) | 5.4 (3.2) |
Results: questionnaire return by experimental condition, using logistic regression adjusting for household and baseline characteristics and clustering
| Outcome | Intervention | Control | Risk difference (unadjusted) (%) | Odds ratio (95% CI) |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Both questionnaires returned | 1577 (71) | 1511 (68) | 3 | 1.15 (1.01–1.31) | 0.030 |
| 1.15a (1.01–1.31) | 0.036 | |||||
| 1.16b (1.02–1.33) | 0.021 | |||||
| Secondary | At least one of questionnaires returned | 1809 (81) | 1787 (80) | 1 | 1.07 (0.92–1.24) | 0.385 |
| 1.07a (0.90–1.28) | 0.463 | |||||
| 1.07b (0.92–1.25) | 0.348 | |||||
| Six-month questionnaire returned | 1739 (78) | 1701 (76) | 2 | 1.10 (0.95–1.27) | 0.165 | |
| 1.10a (0.94–1.30) | 0.233 | |||||
| 1.11b (0.96–1.28) | 0.149 | |||||
| 12-month questionnaire returned | 1647 (74) | 1597 (72) | 2 | 1.12 (0.98–1.28) | 0.087 | |
| 1.12a (0.98–1.28) | 0.086 | |||||
| 1.14b (0.99–1.29) | 0.062 | |||||
aAdjusted for multiple participants per household
bAdjusted for age, quality of life, gender, living alone and education