Comparability of skin screening histories obtained by telephone interviews and mailed questionnaires: A randomized crossover study


Autoria(s): Aitken, Joanne F.; Youl, Philippa H.; Janda, Monika; Elwood, Mark; Ring, Ian T.; Lowe, John B.
Contribuinte(s)

J. Fox

Data(s)

15/09/2004

Resumo

The comparability of information collected through telephone interviews and information collected through mailed questionnaires has not been well studied. As part of the first phase of a randomized controlled trial of population screening for melanoma in Queensland, Australia, the authors compared histories of skin examination reported in telephone interviews and self-administered mailed questionnaires. A total of 1,270 subjects each completed a telephone interview and a mailed questionnaire 1 month apart in 1999; 564 subjects received the interview first, and 706 received the mailed questionnaire first. Agreement between the two methods was 91.2% and 88.6% for whole-body skin examination by a physician in the last 12 months and the last 3 years, respectively, and 81.9% for whole-body skin self-examination in the last 12 months. Agreement was lower for any skin self-examination. Agreement between the two methods was similar regardless of whether the interview or the questionnaire was administered first. Missing data were less frequent for interviews (0.5%) than for mailed questionnaires (3.8%). Costs were estimated at A$9.55 (US$6.21) per completed interview and A$3.01 (US$1.96) per questionnaire. The similarity of results obtained using telephone interviews and mailed questionnaires, coupled with the substantially higher cost of telephone interviews, suggests that self-administered mailed questionnaires are an appropriate method of assessing this health behavior.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:74603

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Oxford University Press

Palavras-Chave #Public, Environmental & Occupational Health #Cross-over Studies #Data Collection #Mass Screening #Melanoma #Randomized Controlled Trials #Skin #Health Survey #Quality #Population #Prevalence #Symptoms #Asthma #Cancer #Modes #Costs #Sf-36 #C1 #321299 Public Health and Health Services not elsewhere classified #730299 Public health not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Journal Article