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Survey Response Rates in Health Sciences Education Research: A 10-Year Meta-Analysis

Authors :
Adam B. Wilson
William S. Brooks
Danielle N. Edwards
Jill Deaver
Jessica A. Surd
Obadiah J. Pirlo
William A. Byrd
Edgar R. Meyer
Amy Beresheim
Stephanie L. Cuskey
Jack G. Tsintolas
Eric S. Norrell
Harriet C. Fisher
Christopher W. Skaggs
Dmytro Mysak
Samantha R. Levin
Carlos E. Escutia Rosas
Andrew S. Cale
Md Nazmul Karim
Jenna Pollock
Nicholas J. Kakos
Monica S. O'Brien
Rebecca S. Lufler
Source :
Anatomical Sciences Education. 2024 17(1):11-23.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Growth in the online survey market may be increasing response burden and possibly jeopardizing higher response rates. This meta-analysis evaluated survey trends over one decade (2011-2020) to determine: (1) changes in survey publication rates over time, (2) changes in response rates over time, (3) typical response rates within health sciences education research, (4) the factors influencing survey completion levels, and (5) common gaps in survey methods and outcomes reporting. Study I estimated survey publication trends between 2011 and 2020 using articles published in the top three health sciences education research journals. Study II searched the anatomical sciences education literature across six databases and extracted study/survey features and survey response rates. Time plots and a proportional meta-analysis were performed. Per 2926 research articles, the annual estimated proportion of studies with survey methodologies has remained constant, with no linear trend (p > 0.050) over time (Study I). Study II reported a pooled absolute response rate of 67% (95% CI = 63.9-69.0) across 360 studies ("k"), totaling 115,526 distributed surveys. Despite response rate oscillations over time, no significant linear trend (p = 0.995) was detected. Neither survey length, incentives, sponsorship, nor population type affected absolute response rates (p [greater than or equal to] 0.070). Only 35% (120 of 339) of studies utilizing a Likert scale reported evidence of survey validity. Survey response rates and the prevalence of studies with survey methodologies have remained stable with no linear trends over time. We recommend researchers strive for a typical absolute response rate of 67% or higher and clearly document evidence of survey validity for empirical studies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1935-9772 and 1935-9780
Volume :
17
Issue :
1
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Anatomical Sciences Education
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ1405687
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Evaluative
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ase.2345