BMC Medical Research Methodology (Jan 2024)

Health estimate differences between six independent web surveys: different web surveys, different results?

  • Rainer Schnell,
  • Jonas Klingwort

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12874-023-02122-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Most general population web surveys are based on online panels maintained by commercial survey agencies. Many of these panels are based on non-probability samples. However, survey agencies differ in their panel selection and management strategies. Little is known if these different strategies cause differences in survey estimates. This paper presents the results of a systematic study designed to analyze the differences in web survey results between agencies. Six different survey agencies were commissioned with the same web survey using an identical standardized questionnaire covering factual health items. Five surveys were fielded at the same time. A calibration approach was used to control the effect of demographics on the outcome. Overall, the results show differences between probability and non-probability surveys in health estimates, which were reduced but not eliminated by weighting. Furthermore, the differences between non-probability surveys before and after weighting are larger than expected between random samples from the same population.

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