Sa. Everett et al., THE EFFECT OF A MONETARY INCENTIVE IN INCREASING THE RETURN RATE OF ASURVEY TO FAMILY PHYSICIANS, Evaluation & the health professions, 20(2), 1997, pp. 207-214
The barrage of requests family physicians receive to complete mail sur
veys often results in physicians who are unwilling, or unable due to t
ime constraints to complete each survey they receive. Thus, to obtain
an acceptable response rate, state-of-the-art mail survey techniques m
ust be used. This article reports the results of the use of a modest (
$1) monetary incentive to increase a survey response rate. A random sa
mple of 600 American Academy of Family Physicians members were mailed
a survey of firearm safety counseling; half received a $1 incentive wh
ereas the remaining half served as a control group. The response rate
in the incentive group was 63% compared to 45% in the control group [c
hi(2) (1, N = 251) = 16.0, p < .001]. Further the use of the incentive
appears to be more cost-effective than a third follow-up (postcard re
minder) mailing.