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Related Experiment Videos

Does follow-up loss reflect poor outcome?

R B Ellsworth

    Evaluation & the Health Professions
    |November 8, 1979
    PubMed
    Summary

    Low response rates in mental health studies do not reflect poor patient adjustment. Instead, data collector style and respondent motivation significantly influence follow-up rates, impacting treatment effectiveness comparisons.

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    Area of Science:

    • Mental Health Services Research
    • Clinical Psychology
    • Health Services Research

    Background:

    • Accurate follow-up data is crucial for comparing mental health treatment effectiveness.
    • Low response rates in follow-up surveys are a persistent challenge.
    • Concerns exist that low response rates may overestimate treatment effectiveness due to poor patient adjustment.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To investigate the relationship between patient posthospital adjustment and mailed questionnaire response rates.
    • To compare the adjustment of patients who responded to mail surveys with those who did not.
    • To identify factors influencing low follow-up response rates in mental health services research.

    Main Methods:

    • Compared follow-up adjustment data from patients who returned mail questionnaires with data from non-responders interviewed by phone.
    • Analyzed patient adjustment levels in relation to survey response behavior.

    Main Results:

    • Patient posthospital adjustment was not a significant predictor of mail questionnaire return.
    • Low response rates were primarily determined by data collector style.
    • The motivation level of questionnaire recipients also played a key role in response rates.

    Conclusions:

    • Findings challenge the assumption that low response rates indicate poor patient adjustment in mental health studies.
    • Data collector characteristics and recipient motivation are critical factors affecting follow-up survey participation.
    • Methodological improvements focusing on data collection strategies are needed to enhance response rates and improve the accuracy of treatment effectiveness evaluations.

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