2020
DOI: 10.1002/nur.22065
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Recruitment of women veterans into suicide prevention research: Improving response rates with enhanced recruitment materials and multiple survey modalities

Abstract: Women veterans (WV) are the fastest growing veteran subpopulation and recognized to be at increased risk for suicide compared with civilians. Improving engagement (e.g., response rates) of WV in survey research is critical to ensuring valid and generalizable findings, which can inform suicide prevention programs tailored for this population. Many factors are known to influence response rates, yet little is known about ways to optimize survey response rates among WV. Three recruitment cohorts (Waves 1 [W1], 2a … Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 23 publications
(33 reference statements)
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“…Often associated with minority status, adverse social determinants of health -lower income, less education, living in an unsafe neighborhood -may also influence a person's ability to engage in preventive health behavior (e.g., less access to healthy foods or opportunities to be physically active). The 32% survey response rate is somewhat low, but it is within the rate of responses from veterans who have completed other paper surveys (Gaeddert et al, 2020). Survey nonresponders were more likely to be significantly younger, male, and members of racial and ethnic minority groups (all p , .001 [Gaffey et al, 2021]).…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Often associated with minority status, adverse social determinants of health -lower income, less education, living in an unsafe neighborhood -may also influence a person's ability to engage in preventive health behavior (e.g., less access to healthy foods or opportunities to be physically active). The 32% survey response rate is somewhat low, but it is within the rate of responses from veterans who have completed other paper surveys (Gaeddert et al, 2020). Survey nonresponders were more likely to be significantly younger, male, and members of racial and ethnic minority groups (all p , .001 [Gaffey et al, 2021]).…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Despite minimal non-response bias 18 , the overall response rate was low, with low base rates for many constructs (e.g., recent SI, suicide attempt). The focus on younger women Veterans accessing VHA RHC also limits generalizability.…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…To facilitate recruitment following an initial recruitment wave, a randomly selected portion also received a study flyer, paper survey, and return envelope in each mailing. 18 Participants consented and received $20 for participating. The local Institutional Review Board approved this study.…”
Section: Participants and Proceduresmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Many research questions seek information that can be applied to a large group of people, including people that were not directly studied. Surveys are the best method to use when wanting to study large groups of people (including entire nations) because -depending on the modality of the survey -they are easy to disseminate across broad geographic areas (see Deutskens, de Jong, de Ruyter, & Wetzels, 2006;Gaeddert et al, 2020;McHorney, Kosinski, & Ware, 1994). Random or probability sampling designs tend to be more easily applied to survey methods as well (e.g., the use of random digit telephone dialing, getting a random sample of mailing addresses), which means that researchers are in a better position to assume that the results from their sample are applicable to a larger population.…”
Section: Generalizabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%