Comparison response patterns on landline and cell phone in a call back survey: effects of demographic characteristics and lag days
The Asthma Call-back Survey (ACBS) is conducted after the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) survey by calling BRFSS respondents who reported ever being diagnosed with asthma. To find response patterns and increase ACBS response rates, we first examined whether obtaining consents dur...
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Zusammenfassung: | The Asthma Call-back Survey (ACBS) is conducted after the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance
System (BRFSS) survey by calling BRFSS respondents who reported ever being diagnosed with
asthma. To find response patterns and increase ACBS response rates, we first examined whether
obtaining consents during the BRFSS survey could increase call back response rates by reducing the
refusal and break-off. Then, we assessed how the lag days between BRFSS and ACBS interviews
affected response rates. BRFSS cell phone respondents agreed more often to being called back than
did landline respondents (75.5 vs. 70.9 percent). However, when respondents were contacted for
ACBS, the cell phone response rate was lower than landline response rate (43.4 vs. 47.0 percent),
except among males aged 25–34 years, for which the cell phone response rate was 2.1 percent higher
than the landline response rate. ACBS response rate for landline and cell phone response were highest
if the callback was within 2 days of BRFSS interviews (92.3 vs. 88.8 percent). As lag days increased,
the response rate decreased. The cell phone response rate showed a sharper drop; after 2 weeks, the
response rate gap between landline and cell phone samples reached 17.3 percent. |
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ISSN: | 2296-4754 |