Recruiting blacks to the Adventist health study: Do follow-up phone calls increase response rates?
- PMID: 15921927
- DOI: 10.1016/j.annepidem.2005.02.003
Recruiting blacks to the Adventist health study: Do follow-up phone calls increase response rates?
Abstract
Purpose: To determine whether follow-up phone calls improve response rates to a long questionnaire among black and white subjects.
Methods: Forty black and 39 white Seventh-day Adventist churches were randomized to experimental or control status in a 2:1 ratio favoring the intervention, which is a follow-up phone call to certain church members. Subjects selected from each church were those who had signed up for the Adventist Health Study-2 but not returned a questionnaire 3 months after promotion began. Further returns from a church over the next 3 months, and this increment as a proportion of baseline response, were assessed using t-tests and Poisson regression, respectively.
Results: Comparing black experimental and control churches, the mean difference was 5.5 returned questionnaires per church (p < 0.01). Among white churches the mean difference was 3.0 (ns). The baseline-adjusted increment, however, was greater by a factor of 3.37 (95% confidence interval, 1.92, 5.93) in the black experimental relative to control churches, but among white experimental churches was 13% (ns) lower than controls. This difference in response by ethnic group was statistically significant (p < 0.01).
Conclusion: Follow-up phone calls improved response rates among black subjects only.
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