Literature DB >> 31337925

The Effect of Framing and Placement on Linkage Consent.

Joseph W Sakshaug, Alexandra Schmucker, Frauke Kreuter, Mick P Couper, Eleanor Singer.   

Abstract

Numerous surveys link interview data to administrative records, conditional on respondent consent, in order to explore new and innovative research questions. Optimizing the linkage consent rate is a critical step toward realizing the scientific advantages of record linkage and minimizing the risk of linkage consent bias. Linkage consent rates have been shown to be particularly sensitive to certain design features, such as where the consent question is placed in the questionnaire and how the question is framed. However, the interaction of these design features and their relative contributions to the linkage consent rate have never been jointly studied, raising the practical question of which design feature (or combination of features) should be prioritized from a consent rate perspective. We address this knowledge gap by reporting the results of a placement and framing experiment embedded within separate telephone and Web surveys. We find a significant interaction between placement and framing of the linkage consent question on the consent rate. The effect of placement was larger than the effect of framing in both surveys, and the effect of framing was only evident in the Web survey when the consent question was placed at the end of the questionnaire. Both design features had negligible impact on linkage consent bias for a series of administrative variables available for consenters and non-consenters. We conclude this research note with guidance on the optimal administration of the linkage consent question.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31337925      PMCID: PMC6639764          DOI: 10.1093/poq/nfz018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Public Opin Q        ISSN: 0033-362X


Introduction

One of Eleanor Singer’s key contributions to the survey methodological literature—and, indeed, social science literature more broadly—relates to the issue of informed consent. Her contributions in this area covered a wide range of topics, including the effect of the consent request on survey participation (e.g., Singer 1978, 2003; Singer, von Thurn, and Miller 1995; Sakshaug et al. 2016), consent to paradata capture (Singer and Couper 2010; Couper and Singer 2013), and attitudes toward administrative data linkages (e.g., Singer, Bates, and van Hoewyk 2011). A core element underlying her work was that the issue of consent in whatever form is not only an ethical one but is also subject to empirical investigation. This paper continues that tradition, focusing on consent to link survey data to administrative records, a topic that is gaining increasing attention (see, e.g., Groves and Harris-Kojetin 2017; Fobia et al. 2019). Many large-scale surveys link interview data to administrative databases in order to enhance research opportunities in the social sciences. Linking administrative data to surveys allows researchers to study many policy-relevant topics, including lifetime employment and earnings, medical expenditures, and government benefit programs. Although administrative data linkages are viewed as cost-effective and useful supplements to survey data, their value is predicated on obtaining linkage consent from respondents. Respondent consent is not automatic, and some evidence suggests that linkage consent rates have declined over time similar to survey participation rates (Fulton 2012). Moreover, there is evidence that linkage non-consent can introduce bias in linked-data estimates (Sakshaug and Kreuter 2012; Sala, Burton, and Knies 2012; Yang, Fricker, and Eltinge 2019). Efforts to optimize linkage consent rates have focused on two design aspects: the framing of the linkage consent question and its placement in the questionnaire. Regarding placement, the linkage consent question is typically administered at the end of the questionnaire. The rationale for this placement comes from questionnaire design guidelines, which recommend administering sensitive questions toward the end of the survey, at which point the respondent is most familiar with the study content and has established rapport with the interviewer (Sudman and Bradburn 1982). However, experimental studies show that administering the linkage consent request at the end of the survey is suboptimal from a consent rate perspective. Sakshaug, Tutz, and Kreuter (2013) conducted a German telephone survey experiment of 2,400 respondents who were asked to link their interview data to employment history records. They found that 95.6 percent of those who received the request at the beginning of the survey gave consent versus 86.0 percent of those who received the request at the end of the survey. Among 2,179 respondents participating in the fourth wave of the Innovation Panel of the UK Household Longitudinal Study, Sala, Knies, and Burton (2014) showed that those experimentally assigned to receive a request to link to administrative state benefit records earlier in the questionnaire consented at a rate of 65 percent compared to 58 percent of those that received the request at the end of the survey. Similar patterns were found in a Web-only establishment survey in Germany. When asked for consent to link federal employment records, Sakshaug and Vicari (2018) reported consent rates of 61.3 percent, 52.3 percent, and 45.2 percent for those randomly assigned to receive the linkage request at the beginning, middle, or end of the survey, respectively. Regarding question framing, the most common strategy is to emphasize the benefits of linkage to respondents, such as to help meet the scientific goals of the study, reduce costs, or minimize respondent burden. This “gain framing” strategy has shown promise in hypothetical data sharing experiments. For example, in a multi-mode US survey of 4,011 respondents asked about their attitudes toward using government records to obtain Decennial Census information, Bates, Wroblewski, and Pascale (2012) reported that 48.2 percent of respondents expressed at least some positivity toward the hypothetical proposal if it was framed in terms of cost savings, 43.5 percent if it was framed in terms of reducing respondent burden, and 37.6 percent among the control group (no benefit framing; see also Fobia et al. 2019, in this issue). However, in practice, the effects of benefit framing have been mixed in data sharing applications. Pascale (2011) experimented with three benefit framing arguments (improved accuracy, reduced costs, and reduced respondent burden) in a US telephone study of 3,318 respondents who were asked if they objected to the linkage of their interview data with government records, but found no significant differences in objection rates between the framing groups. The aforementioned telephone study by Sakshaug, Tutz, and Kreuter (2013) also yielded no significant differences in linkage consent rates between respondents randomized to a time-saving argument and a neutral framing condition. However, a replication of this experiment conducted in a Web-only survey of 1,194 respondents in Germany who were asked for consent to link employment history records revealed a slight advantage of the time-savings argument, which yielded a consent rate of 61.6 percent compared to 55.4 percent in the neutral framing condition (Sakshaug and Kreuter 2014). An alternative framing strategy emphasizes the consequences (or losses) of not consenting to linkage. The notion of framing a decision in terms of losses was conceptualized in a series of experiments by Kahneman and Tversky (1979, 1984), who showed that people become risk seeking when faced with choices that are framed in terms of sure losses and risk averse when the same choices are framed in terms of sure gains. Kreuter, Sakshaug, and Tourangeau (2016) tested this framing strategy in a linkage consent experiment embedded within a telephone survey of 750 Maryland residents by emphasizing the diminished value of the collected interview data if consent to link to voting records was not provided (loss frame) versus emphasizing the enhanced value of the interview data if consent was provided (gain frame). In line with Kahneman and Tversky (1979, 1984), a higher consent rate was obtained under the loss-framing strategy (66.8 percent vs. 56.1 percent). For the survey designer, it is useful to know that both beginning-placement and loss-framing the linkage consent request can positively impact the consent rate. However, what is unknown is how these two design features interact. For example, emphasizing the diminished value of the non-linked interview data (loss frame) is likely to be more salient to respondents at the end of the survey after they have answered all survey items, compared to the beginning when they have answered none. This argument is in line with Sakshaug, Wolter, and Kreuter (2015), who showed in a German telephone survey of 1,521 employees that loss-framing the request for consent to link to employment history records was less effective than gain-framing the request when the framing emphasis (diminished vs. enhanced value) was put on the ensuing interview data. This study, however, did not vary the placement of the request—both framing versions were implemented at the approximate midpoint of the questionnaire. Thus, it remains unclear to what extent the placement of the consent question affects the saliency of the gain-loss framing and which combination of placement and framing maximizes the linkage consent rate and minimizes the risk of consent bias. We address this knowledge gap through a linkage consent experiment in which the placement and framing of the consent question were varied in separate telephone and Web surveys. In addition to assessing the joint impact of placement and framing on the linkage consent rate, we also assess whether these design features differentially impact linkage consent bias based on a selection of federal administrative variables available for both consenters and non-consenters. The aim of this investigation is to provide guidance to the survey practitioner on the optimal design of the linkage consent question from both a consent rate and consent bias perspective.

Data and Methods

TELEPHONE AND WEB SURVEYS

We administered linkage consent experiments in two separate survey implementations using samples of named individuals drawn from register data of the Federal Employment Agency of Germany (in German: Bundesagentur für Arbeit; which we will refer to as the BA). The BA register covers all working-age individuals who make social security contributions or utilize employment-related support services offered by the BA (vom Berge, Burghardt, and Trenkle 2013). The telephone sample (n = 7,001) was drawn from the BA register using a reference date of December 31, 2012, which at the time covered about 89 percent of the German civilian labor force between the ages of 15 and 64. Telephone numbers were acquired through BA records and address matching to commercial databases for 65.9 percent of sampled individuals. Individuals without a matched telephone number are treated as non-respondents. Fieldwork occurred between October 9 and November 19, 2014, and yielded 677 interviews for a response rate of 9.7 percent (Response Rate 1; AAPOR 2016). The Web sample (n = 4,952) was drawn from the BA register using the same reference date as the telephone sample. Invitations were mailed to all households, and the Web survey ran from November 11, 2014, to February 12, 2015. A total of 651 interviews were completed for an RR1 response rate of 13.2 percent. An additional 28 Web respondents broke off the survey before the consent question was presented. These cases are excluded from further analysis. Both surveys were introduced under the theme “Challenges in the German Labor Market 2014.” Each questionnaire contained similar content and covered several topics, including employment history, job-seeking activities, and social media usage.

EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN

The linkage consent experiment consisted of a fully crossed 2 × 2 factorial design of framing and placement. Respondents were randomly assigned to receive a gain- or loss-framing version of the linkage consent question at the beginning or end of the survey. Table 1 shows the distribution of respondents to experimental conditions.
Table 1.

Number of respondents allocated to framing and placement conditions

Telephone survey
Framing
PlacementGainLossTotal (placement)
Beginning181178359
End141177318
Total (framing)322355677
Number of respondents allocated to framing and placement conditions Following a general prefacing statement (see Supplementary Online Material), the linkage consent question was presented. Each version of the consent question is shown in table 2. Following Kreuter, Sakshaug, and Tourangeau (2016) and Sakshaug, Wolter, and Kreuter (2015), the gain-framing version emphasized that the interview data would be “more useful” if consent was provided, whereas the loss-framing version emphasized that the interview data would be “less useful” if consent was not provided. These framing words were bolded in the Web survey. In the beginning-placement condition, the gain/loss-framing emphasis was put on the ensuing interview data “that you will give us in the course of the interview,” whereas the framing emphasis in the end-placement condition was put on the interview data “that you have already given us.”
Table 2.

Wording of linkage consent question (English translation) by framing and placement conditions

Framing
Placement GainLoss
BeginningThe information that you will give us in the course of the interview will be more useful if you agree to link with the data of the Federal Agency. Are you consenting to the transmission of the information?Unfortunately, the information you will give us in the course of the interview will be less useful if you disagree to link with the data of the Federal Agency. Are you consenting to the transmission of the information?
EndThe information that you have already given us in the course of the interview is more useful if you agree to link with the data of the Federal Agency. Are you consenting to the transmission of the information?Unfortunately, the information that you have already given us in the course of the interview is less useful if you disagree to link with the data of the Federal Agency. Are you consenting to the transmission of the information?

Note.—The original German text is provided in Supplementary Online Table S1. The gain- and loss-framing arguments “more useful” and “less useful” appeared in bold font in the Web survey.

Wording of linkage consent question (English translation) by framing and placement conditions Note.—The original German text is provided in Supplementary Online Table S1. The gain- and loss-framing arguments “more useful” and “less useful” appeared in bold font in the Web survey.

MATCHING CONSENT TO ADMINISTRATIVE VARIABLES

In order to identify the administrative records corresponding to the consenting and non-consenting respondents, the linkage consent indicator from the survey was directly merged to the register data. Like many survey paradata variables (e.g., number of contact attempts, time stamps), the linkage consent indicator is not considered a substantive survey variable and therefore can be linked to the administrative data without respondent consent. This procedure was approved by the legal team of the Institute for Employment Research of the Federal Employment Agency of Germany and has been used in previous methodological studies on linkage consent bias (e.g., Sakshaug and Kreuter 2012; Sakshaug et al. 2017).

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS

We use chi-squared tests to test the interaction between placement and framing on the linkage consent rate. We also conduct chi-squared tests on consent rate differences between conditions within a single factor (e.g., gain vs. loss framing within the beginning-placement condition). To assess the impact of placement and framing on linkage consent bias, we make use of seven dichotomized administrative variables extracted from the BA register on December 31, 2012, which corresponds to the same reference date both telephone and Web survey samples were drawn. The variables are sex (male), age (≥ 46 years), received non-university vocational training, currently employed, at least one employer change since 2008, average daily wage between 0 and 70 EUR, and at least one welfare benefit receipt since 2008. Descriptive estimates of each variable are provided in Appendix Tables A1, A2 (telephone), A3, and A4 (Web). These variables, which have been extensively used in methodological studies using the BA data (Kreuter, Müller, and Trappmann 2010; West, Kreuter, and Jaenichen 2013; Kirchner 2015), are merged to all respondents with a 100 percent match rate using unique IDs from the sampling frame.
Table A1.

Percentage estimates of administrative variables by framing and placement conditions (main effects) among telephone survey respondents and consenters

Telephone survey respondentsTelephone survey consenters
FramingPlacementFramingPlacement
Administrative variablesOverallGainLossBeginningEndOverallGainLossBeginningEnd
Sex (Male)49.953.446.849.350.651.155.147.449.153.9
Age ≥ 46 years56.654.058.956.356.956.552.460.356.356.8
Received non-university vocational training42.141.942.343.240.944.443.845.044.144.9
Currently employed76.176.176.175.876.477.476.878.178.176.5
At least one employer change since 200846.546.546.447.345.547.149.445.047.746.4
Avg. daily wage between 0–70 EUR50.251.648.950.350.050.951.550.450.451.8
At least one welfare benefit receipt since 200865.165.265.163.267.364.665.264.162.867.1

Table A2. Percentage estimates of administrative variables by framing and placement conditions (cross-classification) among telephone survey respondents and consenters

Telephone survey respondentsTelephone survey consenters
Placement: BeginningPlacement: EndPlacement: BeginningPlacement: End
Administrative variablesGain frameLoss frameGain frameLoss frameGain frameLoss frameGain frameLoss frame
Sex (Male)55.343.351.150.354.643.255.952.3
Age ≥ 46 years53.059.555.358.252.160.752.959.9
Received non-university vocational training42.044.441.840.141.846.547.143.2
Currently employed75.775.876.676.377.079.476.576.5
At least one employer change since 200849.145.543.347.350.344.948.045.2
Avg. daily wage between 0–70 EUR49.451.354.446.250.450.453.350.5
At least one welfare benefit receipt since 200869.157.360.372.969.755.557.874.2
Linkage consent bias is assessed by comparing the estimated proportion of the administrative variable () based on respondents who consented to the linkage (), and the corresponding proportion based on all respondents (): A summary measure of average absolute linkage consent bias is also reported, which is calculated as the average of the absolute values of all consent bias estimates:

Results

Linkage consent rates for each experimental condition and survey are presented in table 3. The overall consent rate in the telephone and Web surveys is 81.8 and 77.3 percent, respectively. Although this difference is statistically significant (p = 0.039), it is not as extreme as the 10–40-percentage-point differences found in other linkage consent studies involving self- and interviewer-administered survey modes (Burton 2016; Sakshaug et al. 2017; Thornby et al. 2017).
Table 3.

Linkage consent rates by framing and placement conditions

Telephone survey
Framing
PlacementGainLossTotal (placement)
Beginning91.787.189.1
(2.1)(2.5)(1.7)
End72.374.673.6
(3.8)(3.3)(2.5)
Total (framing)82.9 80.981.8
(2.1)(2.1)(1.5)

Note.—Parenthetical entries are standard errors.

Linkage consent rates by framing and placement conditions Note.—Parenthetical entries are standard errors.

FRAMING AND PLACEMENT ON THE LINKAGE CONSENT RATE

We now examine the impact of framing and placement on the linkage consent rate. We find a significant interaction between both factors in each survey (p < 0.01). To our surprise, framing the consent request in terms of gains or losses does not lead to statistically significant differences in the linkage consent rate, except in the Web survey where loss-framing yields an 11-percentage-point increase over gain-framing when the request is made at the end of the survey (p = 0.028). Regarding placement, table 3 shows that this design feature has a larger effect on the consent rate than framing. The results confirm the advantage of asking for consent at the beginning of the survey as opposed to the end. In both surveys, the superiority of beginning-placement is evident regardless of framing condition (p < 0.05).

FRAMING AND PLACEMENT ON LINKAGE CONSENT BIAS

Next, we examine the effects of framing and placement on linkage consent bias. Estimates of average absolute linkage consent bias across the seven administrative variables are presented in figure 1 (a tabular version is provided in Appendix Table A5). Individual consent biases are presented in Appendix Tables A6 and A7. The figure shows statistically significant (p < 0.05), but substantively small, average absolute linkage consent biases for every framing and placement condition, ranging from 0.85 percentage points (Gain-Beginning) to 2.96 percentage points (Gain-End) in the telephone survey, and 1.08 percentage points (Loss-Beginning) to 2.31 percentage points (Loss-End) in the Web survey. The figure also shows no statistically significant differences in consent bias between the experimental conditions in either survey. Thus, we conclude that framing and placement of the linkage consent question do not differentially impact linkage consent bias.
Figure 1.

Average absolute linkage consent bias by framing and placement conditions. Error bars are 95 percent confidence intervals.

Table A5. Average absolute linkage consent bias by framing and placement condition

Telephone surveyWeb survey
FramingFraming
PlacementGainLossOverall (placement)PlacementGainLossOverall (placement)
Beginning0.9 (0)1.4 (1)0.6 (1)Beginning2.1 (2)1.1 (0)1.1 (1)
End3.0 (3)2.1 (1)1.5 (2)End1.9 (0)2.3 (2)1.1 (0)
Overall (framing)1.3 (1)1.5 (2)1.0 (2)Overall (Framing)1.2 (0)1.4 (2)0.7 (0)

Note.—Parenthetical entries denote the number of statistically significant (p < 0.10) linkage consent biases out of seven administrative variables.

Table A6. Signed bias by framing and placement conditions (main effects)

Telephone surveyWeb survey
FramingPlacementFramingPlacement
Administrative variablesOverallGainLossBeginningEndOverallGainLossBeginningEnd
Sex (Male)1.21.60.6–0.2 3.2 –1.31.3 –3.3 –0.2–2.2
Age ≥ 46 years–0.1–1.61.4–0.0–0.1–0.61.0–2.00.1–1.0
Received non-university vocational training 2.3 1.9 2.7 0.9 4.0 0.30.80.20.8–0.0
Currently employed 1.4 0.7 2.0 2.4 0.10.11.5–1.1 1.8 –1.7
At least one employer change since 20080.7 2.9 –1.40.40.91.61.1 2.1 1.41.4
Avg. daily wage between 0–70 EUR0.8–0.11.60.01.8–0.5–1.70.6–1.60.7
At least one welfare benefit receipt since 2008–0.5–0.1–1.0–0.4–0.2–0.4–1.10.3–1.5–0.2
Avg. Abs. linkage consent bias 1.01.31.50.61.50.71.21.41.11.1

Note.—Boldface entries denote statistically significant biases at the 0.10 level.

Table A7. Signed bias by framing and placement condition (cross-classification)

Telephone surveyWeb survey
Placement: BeginningPlacement: EndPlacement: BeginningPlacement:End
Administrative variablesGain frameLoss frameGain frameLoss frameGain frameLoss frameGain frameLoss frame
Sex (Male)–0.7–0.0 4.8 2.01.8–2.11.3 –4.4
Age ≥ 46 years–0.91.1–2.41.70.7–0.62.5 –3.3
Received non-university vocational training–0.22.1 5.2 3.1 3.1 –1.0–3.02.1
Currently employed1.3 3.5 –0.10.3 4.5 –0.8–3.0–1.0
At least one employer change since 20081.2–0.6 4.7 –2.11.21.60.62.2
Avg. daily wage between 0–70 EUR1.0–0.9–1.1 4.3 –3.0–0.1–0.21.4
At least one welfare benefit receipt since 20080.6–1.8–2.41.4–0.3–1.3–2.91.8
Avg. Abs. linkage consent bias 0.91.43.02.12.11.11.92.3

Note.—Boldface entries denote statistically significant biases at the 0.10 level.

Average absolute linkage consent bias by framing and placement conditions. Error bars are 95 percent confidence intervals.

Discussion

This is the first study to examine the combined and interactive effects of framing and placement of the linkage consent question. We found a significant interaction between the framing (gain vs. loss) and placement (beginning vs. end) of the linkage consent question, indicating that both factors (and their combination) can positively influence the linkage consent rate. However, the importance of both design features varied in separate telephone and Web survey implementations. In both surveys, placement had a stronger effect than framing on the linkage consent rate: requesting linkage consent at the beginning of the survey always yielded a higher consent rate than requesting consent at the end of the survey regardless of framing condition. The effect of framing was evident only in the Web survey, where loss-framing yielded a higher consent rate than gain-framing, but only when the consent request came at the end of the survey. Finally, despite differences in consent rates, we found no statistically significant differences in average linkage consent bias between the placement and framing conditions. The results are in line with other studies showing that end-placement of the linkage consent question is suboptimal from a consent rate perspective (Sakshaug et al. 2013; Sala, Knies, and Burton 2014; Sakshaug and Vicari 2018). The Web survey finding that loss-framing is more effective than gain-framing when the consent question is asked at the end of the survey replicates the results of Kreuter, Sakshaug, and Tourangeau (2016). The presence of a framing effect in the Web survey, but not the telephone survey, is consistent with other linkage consent studies showing mixed framing effects in self- and interviewer-administered modes (Pascale 2011; Bates, Wroblewski, and Pascale 2012; Sakshaug, Tutz, and Kreuter 2013; Sakshaug and Kreuter 2014). Given these consistencies with the literature, we expect our results to be generalizable to other surveys with different populations and to linkages involving other administrative data types that are performed in a research context. The Web survey framing effect could be due to the visual nature of the mode, which ensures that the entire consent statement is presented to respondents, which is in contrast to the telephone mode, where there is no assurance that respondents intensely listen to, or interviewers read, the entire statement. Alternatively, one might expect smaller wording effects on the Web because respondents may be less likely to read the entire statement, so the fact that we find larger framing effects on the Web is important as more surveys shift their data collection activities to the Web. Nevertheless, more research is needed to better understand the extent to which consent statements are fully read online. Based on the study results, we now provide some general guidance on the optimal administration of the linkage consent request. Most importantly, we suggest that the linkage consent question be asked as early as possible in the survey, as this design decision has the most consistent impact on maximizing the linkage consent rate. How the consent question is framed—whether in terms of gains or losses—is less important if an optimal placement is used. However, if the survey is implemented online and it is only possible to request linkage consent at the end of the survey, then the suggestion is to loss-frame the request by emphasizing the negative consequences of not obtaining linkage consent. While these suggestions are likely to maximize consent, they are unlikely to significantly impact linkage consent bias, as we showed here. In conclusion, it is of some concern to see linkage consent rates vary to this extent by placement and framing. To us, this suggests that attitudes toward linkage are not as strongly held as regulations requiring consent for linkage might assume. Thus, further research is needed into the understanding of the requests themselves and how informed such consent is, consistent with Eleanor Singer’s long-standing work in this area. Click here for additional data file.

Table A3. Percentage estimates of administrative variables by framing and placement conditions (main effects) among web sur- vey respondents and consenters

Web survey respondentsWeb survey consenters
FramingPlacementFramingPlacement
Administrative variablesOverallGainLossBeginningEndOverallGainLossBeginningEnd
Sex (Male)53.255.351.151.754.651.956.647.851.552.4
Age ≥ 46 years61.461.661.358.864.160.862.659.358.963.1
Received non-university vocational training43.646.940.542.245.143.947.740.743.045.1
Currently employed84.284.184.383.485.084.385.583.285.283.3
At least one employer change since 200833.334.432.235.730.934.935.534.337.132.3
Avg. daily wage between 0–70 EUR35.135.334.935.834.434.633.635.534.135.2
At least one welfare benefit receipt since 200851.953.450.553.950.051.552.350.852.449.8

Table A4. Percentage estimates of administrative variables by framing and placement conditions (cross-classification) among web survey respondents and consenters

Web survey respondentsWeb survey consenters
Placement: BeginningPlacement: EndPlacement: BeginningPlacement: End
Administrative variablesGain frameLoss frameGain frameLoss frameGain frameLoss frameGain frameLoss frame
Sex (Male)52.750.658.351.454.448.559.647.0
Age ≥ 46 years57.460.366.262.358.159.768.759.0
Received non-university vocational training49.134.644.445.752.233.641.447.8
Currently employed85.281.482.886.989.780.679.885.8
At least one employer change since 200836.235.232.429.637.336.833.031.8
Avg. daily wage between 0–70 EUR36.934.533.635.233.934.433.336.5
At least one welfare benefit receipt since 200856.251.350.349.755.950.047.851.5
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Authors:  E Singer
Journal:  Am Sociol Rev       Date:  1978-04

2.  Informed Consent for Web Paradata Use.

Authors:  Mick P Couper; Eleanor Singer
Journal:  Surv Res Methods       Date:  2013
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1.  Public opinion on sharing data from health services for clinical and research purposes without explicit consent: an anonymous online survey in the UK.

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Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-04-27       Impact factor: 3.006

2.  Does Benefit Framing Improve Record Linkage Consent Rates? A Survey Experiment.

Authors:  Joseph W Sakshaug; Jens Stegmaier; Mark Trappmann; Frauke Kreuter
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