BMC Primary Care (Jun 2024)

Recruitment, data collection, participation rate, and representativeness of the international cross-sectional PRICOV-19 study across 38 countries

  • Athina Tatsioni,
  • Peter Groenewegen,
  • Esther Van Poel,
  • Kyriaki Vafeidou,
  • Radost Assenova,
  • Kathryn Hoffmann,
  • Emmily Schaubroeck,
  • Stefanie Stark,
  • Victoria Tkachenko,
  • Sara Willems

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-024-02438-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. S1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Background Recruitment for surveys has been a great challenge, especially in general practice. Methods Here, we reported recruitment strategies, data collection, participation rates (PR) and representativeness of the PRICOV-19 study, an international comparative, cross-sectional, online survey among general practices (GP practices) in 37 European countries and Israel. Results Nine (24%) countries reported a published invitation; 19 (50%) had direct contact with all GPs/GP practices; 19 (50%) contacted a sample of GPs /GP practices; and 7 (18%) used another invitation strategy. The median participation rate was 22% (IQR = 10%, 28%). Multiple invitation strategies (P-value 0.93) and multiple strategies to increase PR (P-value 0.64) were not correlated with the PR. GP practices in (semi-) rural areas, GP practices serving more than 10,000 patients, and group practices were over-represented (P-value < 0.001). There was no significant correlation between the PR and strength of the primary care (PC) system [Spearman’s r 0.13, 95% CI (-0.24, 0.46); P-value 0.49]; the COVID-19 morbidity [Spearman’s r 0.19, 95% CI (-0.14, 0.49); P-value 0.24], or COVID-19 mortality [Spearman’s r 0.19, 95% CI (-0.02, 0.58); P-value 0.06] during the three months before country-specific study commencement. Conclusion Our main contribution here was to describe the survey recruitment and representativeness of PRICOV-19, an important and novel study.

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