Methodological and economic evaluations of seven survey modes applied to health service research

© 2016 Royal Pharmaceutical Society. Objective: To evaluate methodological outcomes and cost-effectiveness of seven survey modes, using a study of general public views towards pharmacy public health services. Methods: A cross-sectional, paper-based survey was conducted in North West England among pe...

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Main Authors: Saramunee K., Mackridge A., Phillips-Howard P., Richards J., Suttajit S., Krska J.
Format: Journal
Published: 2017
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84951764886&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/42067
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-420672017-09-28T04:24:59Z Methodological and economic evaluations of seven survey modes applied to health service research Saramunee K. Mackridge A. Phillips-Howard P. Richards J. Suttajit S. Krska J. © 2016 Royal Pharmaceutical Society. Objective: To evaluate methodological outcomes and cost-effectiveness of seven survey modes, using a study of general public views towards pharmacy public health services. Methods: A cross-sectional, paper-based survey was conducted in North West England among people aged ≥18 years, using two approaches. Three interviewer-assisted modes were street, door-to-door and telephone. Four self-completion modes were single- and double-mailing to residential addresses, surveys sent to public/private business by post (postal-business) and questionnaires dropped-off at venues (drop-off). The study compared response rates, demographics and two domains ((a) actual use of and (b) willingness to use pharmacy public health services) between modes. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios of different modes were assessed against the single-mailing. Key findings: Response rate varied between 5.1% (postal-business) and 34.5% (street). Respondent age, education, employment, socioeconomic and deprivation status varied between different modes. Results for domain (a) were similar for all modes. Interviewer-assisted modes resulted in more positive views on willingness to use advisory services (P < 0.05). The drop-off mode saved £45.92 (US$72.55) per 1% increase in response rate compared to single-mailing, while interviewer-assisted and double-mailing were more costly. At higher response rates, cost-savings by the drop-off mode diminished, but for other survey modes, additional costs decreased. Conclusion: Drop-off mode is cost-effective compared to the standard single-mailing, but selection bias is possible. Street surveys are also an efficient method, but may carry a higher risk of obsequiousness bias. Mixed-modes surveys may reach wider sectors of the population. The similarity in use of services suggests all survey modes reach members of the public relevant to pharmacy researchers. JPHSR 2017-09-28T04:24:59Z 2017-09-28T04:24:59Z 2016-03-01 Journal 17598885 2-s2.0-84951764886 10.1111/jphs.12121 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84951764886&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/42067
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
description © 2016 Royal Pharmaceutical Society. Objective: To evaluate methodological outcomes and cost-effectiveness of seven survey modes, using a study of general public views towards pharmacy public health services. Methods: A cross-sectional, paper-based survey was conducted in North West England among people aged ≥18 years, using two approaches. Three interviewer-assisted modes were street, door-to-door and telephone. Four self-completion modes were single- and double-mailing to residential addresses, surveys sent to public/private business by post (postal-business) and questionnaires dropped-off at venues (drop-off). The study compared response rates, demographics and two domains ((a) actual use of and (b) willingness to use pharmacy public health services) between modes. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios of different modes were assessed against the single-mailing. Key findings: Response rate varied between 5.1% (postal-business) and 34.5% (street). Respondent age, education, employment, socioeconomic and deprivation status varied between different modes. Results for domain (a) were similar for all modes. Interviewer-assisted modes resulted in more positive views on willingness to use advisory services (P < 0.05). The drop-off mode saved £45.92 (US$72.55) per 1% increase in response rate compared to single-mailing, while interviewer-assisted and double-mailing were more costly. At higher response rates, cost-savings by the drop-off mode diminished, but for other survey modes, additional costs decreased. Conclusion: Drop-off mode is cost-effective compared to the standard single-mailing, but selection bias is possible. Street surveys are also an efficient method, but may carry a higher risk of obsequiousness bias. Mixed-modes surveys may reach wider sectors of the population. The similarity in use of services suggests all survey modes reach members of the public relevant to pharmacy researchers. JPHSR
format Journal
author Saramunee K.
Mackridge A.
Phillips-Howard P.
Richards J.
Suttajit S.
Krska J.
spellingShingle Saramunee K.
Mackridge A.
Phillips-Howard P.
Richards J.
Suttajit S.
Krska J.
Methodological and economic evaluations of seven survey modes applied to health service research
author_facet Saramunee K.
Mackridge A.
Phillips-Howard P.
Richards J.
Suttajit S.
Krska J.
author_sort Saramunee K.
title Methodological and economic evaluations of seven survey modes applied to health service research
title_short Methodological and economic evaluations of seven survey modes applied to health service research
title_full Methodological and economic evaluations of seven survey modes applied to health service research
title_fullStr Methodological and economic evaluations of seven survey modes applied to health service research
title_full_unstemmed Methodological and economic evaluations of seven survey modes applied to health service research
title_sort methodological and economic evaluations of seven survey modes applied to health service research
publishDate 2017
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84951764886&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/42067
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