BMC Health Services Research (Sep 2012)

The LINKIN Health Census process: design and implementation

  • Hoon-Leahy Catherine,
  • Newbury Jonathan,
  • Kitson Alison,
  • Whitford Deirdre,
  • Wilson Anne,
  • Karnon Jonathan,
  • Baker Jenny,
  • Jamrozik Konrad,
  • Beilby Justin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-12-321
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 321

Abstract

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Abstract This paper describes the first phase of the LINKIN Health Study, which aims to evaluate health system functioning within a rural population. Locally relevant data on the health status and service usage of this population, including non-users and users, health service providers traditionally omitted from health services research, and multiple socio-economic indicators, was collected using a self-complete health census. Household response was 75% (N = 4425). Response was greater when face-to-face contact was made at delivery compared to when questionnaires were left in the letterbox (89% vs 64%), falling to 26% when no face-to-face contact was made at either delivery or collection.