Reported response rates to mailed physician questionnaires.
Abstract
To examine response rate information from mailed physician questionnaires reported in published articles. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING: Citations for articles published between 1985 and 1995 were obtained using a key word search of the Medline, PsychLit, and Sociofile databases. STUDY DESIGN: A 5 percent random sample of relevant citations was selected from each year. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS: Citations found to be other than physician surveys were discarded and replaced with the next randomly assigned article. Selected articles were abstracted using a standardized variable list. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The average response rate for mailed physician questionnaires was 61 percent. The average response rate for large sample surveys (> 1,000 observations) was 52 percent. In addition, only 44 percent of the abstracted articles reported a discussion of response bias, and only 54 percent reported any type of follow-up.
(1) Response rates have remained somewhat constant over time, and (2) researchers need to document the efforts used to increase response rates to mailed physician questionnaires.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.18
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 9
Authors
3- SCSM CummingsCorresponding
Simmons University
- KTKonrad, T
- SLSavitz, L
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Non-response bias
- MEDLINE
- Family medicine
- Response bias
- Sample size determination
- Psychology
- Statistics
- Quality Education