Who does not participate in a follow-up postal study? a survey of infertile couples treated by in vitro fertilization

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>A good response rate has been considered as a proof of a study’s quality. Decreasing participation and its potential impact on the internal validity of the study are of growing interest. Our objective was to assess factors associated...

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Main Authors: Troude Penelope, Bailly Estelle, Guibert Juliette, Bouyer Jean, de La Rochebrochard Elise
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-07-01
Series:BMC Medical Research Methodology
Subjects:
IVF
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2288/12/104
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spelling doaj-f9b18c91d38b4edab5dfdf277204d2572020-11-24T23:18:30ZengBMCBMC Medical Research Methodology1471-22882012-07-0112110410.1186/1471-2288-12-104Who does not participate in a follow-up postal study? a survey of infertile couples treated by in vitro fertilizationTroude PenelopeBailly EstelleGuibert JulietteBouyer Jeande La Rochebrochard Elise<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>A good response rate has been considered as a proof of a study’s quality. Decreasing participation and its potential impact on the internal validity of the study are of growing interest. Our objective was to assess factors associated with contact and response to a postal survey in a epidemiological study of the long-term outcome of IVF couples.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The DAIFI study is a retrospective cohort including 6,507 couples who began an IVF program in 2000-2002 in one of the eight participating French IVF centers. Medical data on all 6,507 couples were obtained from IVF center databases, and information on long-term outcome was available only for participants in the postal survey (<it>n</it> = 2,321). Logistic regressions were used to assess firstly factors associated with contact and secondly factors associated with response to the postal questionnaire among contacted couples.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Sixty-two percent of the 6,507 couples were contacted and 58% of these responded to the postal questionnaire. Contacted couples were more likely to have had a child during IVF treatment than non-contactable couples, and the same was true of respondents compared with non-respondents. Demographic and medical characteristics were both associated with probability of contact and probability of response. After adjustment, having a live birth during IVF treatment remained associated with both probabilities, and more strongly with probability of response. Having a child during IVF treatment was a major factor impacting on participation rate.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Non-response as well as non-contact were linked to the outcome of interest, i.e. long-term parenthood success of infertile couples. Our study illustrates that an a priori hypothesis may be too simplistic and may underestimate potential bias. In the context of growing use of analytical methods that take attrition into account (such as multiple imputation), we need to better understand the mechanisms that underlie attrition in order to choose the most appropriate method.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2288/12/104InfertilityIVFPostal surveyResponse rate
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Troude Penelope
Bailly Estelle
Guibert Juliette
Bouyer Jean
de La Rochebrochard Elise
spellingShingle Troude Penelope
Bailly Estelle
Guibert Juliette
Bouyer Jean
de La Rochebrochard Elise
Who does not participate in a follow-up postal study? a survey of infertile couples treated by in vitro fertilization
BMC Medical Research Methodology
Infertility
IVF
Postal survey
Response rate
author_facet Troude Penelope
Bailly Estelle
Guibert Juliette
Bouyer Jean
de La Rochebrochard Elise
author_sort Troude Penelope
title Who does not participate in a follow-up postal study? a survey of infertile couples treated by in vitro fertilization
title_short Who does not participate in a follow-up postal study? a survey of infertile couples treated by in vitro fertilization
title_full Who does not participate in a follow-up postal study? a survey of infertile couples treated by in vitro fertilization
title_fullStr Who does not participate in a follow-up postal study? a survey of infertile couples treated by in vitro fertilization
title_full_unstemmed Who does not participate in a follow-up postal study? a survey of infertile couples treated by in vitro fertilization
title_sort who does not participate in a follow-up postal study? a survey of infertile couples treated by in vitro fertilization
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Research Methodology
issn 1471-2288
publishDate 2012-07-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>A good response rate has been considered as a proof of a study’s quality. Decreasing participation and its potential impact on the internal validity of the study are of growing interest. Our objective was to assess factors associated with contact and response to a postal survey in a epidemiological study of the long-term outcome of IVF couples.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The DAIFI study is a retrospective cohort including 6,507 couples who began an IVF program in 2000-2002 in one of the eight participating French IVF centers. Medical data on all 6,507 couples were obtained from IVF center databases, and information on long-term outcome was available only for participants in the postal survey (<it>n</it> = 2,321). Logistic regressions were used to assess firstly factors associated with contact and secondly factors associated with response to the postal questionnaire among contacted couples.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Sixty-two percent of the 6,507 couples were contacted and 58% of these responded to the postal questionnaire. Contacted couples were more likely to have had a child during IVF treatment than non-contactable couples, and the same was true of respondents compared with non-respondents. Demographic and medical characteristics were both associated with probability of contact and probability of response. After adjustment, having a live birth during IVF treatment remained associated with both probabilities, and more strongly with probability of response. Having a child during IVF treatment was a major factor impacting on participation rate.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Non-response as well as non-contact were linked to the outcome of interest, i.e. long-term parenthood success of infertile couples. Our study illustrates that an a priori hypothesis may be too simplistic and may underestimate potential bias. In the context of growing use of analytical methods that take attrition into account (such as multiple imputation), we need to better understand the mechanisms that underlie attrition in order to choose the most appropriate method.</p>
topic Infertility
IVF
Postal survey
Response rate
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2288/12/104
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