Published July 3, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Impact of different financial incentive structures on a web-based health survey: Do timing and amount matter?

  • 1. University of Washington
  • 2. University of Chicago
  • 3. Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute

Description

Aim: Financial incentives improve response to electronic health surveys, yet little is known about how unconditional incentives (guaranteed regardless of survey completion), conditional incentives, and various combinations of incentives influence response rates. We compared electronic health survey completion with two different financial incentive structures.

Methods: We invited women aged 30-64 years enrolled in a U.S. healthcare system and overdue for Pap screening to complete a web-based survey after receiving a mailed human papillomavirus (HPV) self-sampling kit in a pragmatic trial. HPV kit returners (n = 272) and non-returners (n = 1,083) were allocated to one of two different incentive structures: (1) Unconditional: 5 dollars pre-incentive only (n = 653); (2) Combined: 2 dollars pre-incentive plus 10 dollars post-incentive conditional on completion (n = 702). Chi-square tests evaluated whether survey completion differed by incentive structure within kit return groups or was modified by kit return status. For each incentive-by-kit status group, the cost-per-survey response was calculated as: ([number invited*pre-incentive amount] + [number responses*post-incentive amount]) / number responses.

Results: Overall, survey response was higher in kit returners vs. kit non-returners (42.6% vs. 11.0%, P < 0.01), and survey response was higher in the combined (20.1%) vs. unconditional (14.4%) incentive group (P = 0.01). Kit return status did not modify the association between incentive type and survey response (P = 0.52). Among respondents, time to survey completion did not differ by incentive type among either kit returners or non-returners. Among returners, the cost-per-survey response was similar between groups (13.57 dollars unconditional; 14.15 dollars combined); among non-returners, the cost was greater in the unconditional (57.78 dollars) versus the combined (25.22 dollars) group.

Conclusion: A combined incentive can be cost-effective for increasing survey response in health services research, particularly in hard-to-reach populations.

Data availability

Data will be made available without investigator support to researchers with adequate resources to cover the regulatory and data sharing costs. Data will be made available after approval of a concept proposal aligned with current data approvals, and with a signed data access agreement.

Files

Impact-of-different-financial-incentive-structures-on-a-web-based-health-survey.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.20517/chatmed.2023.002
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:7724

Funding

National Cancer Institute
R01CA168598

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Public Health Sciences