Journal of Medical Internet Research (Jul 2015)

Allowing Physicians to Choose the Value of Compensation for Participation in a Web-Based Survey: Randomized Controlled Trial

  • Turnbull, Alison E,
  • O'Connor, Cristi L,
  • Lau, Bryan,
  • Halpern, Scott D,
  • Needham, Dale M

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/jmir.3898
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 7
p. e189

Abstract

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BackgroundSurvey response rates among physicians are declining, and determining an appropriate level of compensation to motivate participation poses a major challenge. ObjectiveTo estimate the effect of permitting intensive care physicians to select their preferred level of compensation for completing a short Web-based survey on physician (1) response rate, (2) survey completion rate, (3) time to response, and (4) time spent completing the survey. MethodsA total of 1850 US intensivists from an existing database were randomized to receive a survey invitation email with or without an Amazon.com incentive available to the first 100 respondents. The incentive could be instantly redeemed for an amount chosen by the respondent, up to a maximum of US $50. ResultsThe overall response rate was 35.90% (630/1755). Among the 35.4% (111/314) of eligible participants choosing the incentive, 80.2% (89/111) selected the maximum value. Among intensivists offered an incentive, the response was 6.0% higher (95% CI 1.5-10.5, P=.01), survey completion was marginally greater (807/859, 94.0% vs 892/991, 90.0%; P=.06), and the median number of days to survey response was shorter (0.8, interquartile range [IQR] 0.2-14.4 vs 6.6, IQR 0.3-22.3; P=.001), with no difference in time spent completing the survey. ConclusionsPermitting intensive care physicians to determine compensation level for completing a short Web-based survey modestly increased response rate and substantially decreased response time without decreasing the time spent on survey completion.