CQUniversity
Browse
DOCUMENT
cqu_13912+bin3dbb08c4-bd3f-43c7-b85e-b7b42dbf5cb7+bin3dbb08c4-bd3f-43c7-b85e-b7b42dbf5cb7.0.pdf (217.27 kB)
DOCUMENT
cqu_13912+bin3dbb08c4-bd3f-43c7-b85e-b7b42dbf5cb7+bin3dbb08c4-bd3f-43c7-b85e-b7b42dbf5cb7.1.pdf (217.27 kB)
DOCUMENT
cqu_13912+bin3dbb08c4-bd3f-43c7-b85e-b7b42dbf5cb7+bin3dbb08c4-bd3f-43c7-b85e-b7b42dbf5cb7.2.pdf (217.27 kB)
1/0
3 files

Effect of telephone follow-up on retention and balance in an alcohol intervention trial

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-19, 00:00 authored by NA Johnson, K Kypri, J Latter, P McElduff, J Attia, R Saitz, JB Saunders, L Wolfenden, A Dunlop, Christopher DoranChristopher Doran
© 2015 The Authors. Objectives: Telephone follow-up is not currently recommended as a strategy to improve retention in randomized trials. The aims of this study were to estimate the effect of telephone follow-up on retention, identify participant characteristics predictive of questionnaire completion during or after telephone follow-up, and estimate the effect of including participants who provided follow-up data during or after telephone follow-up on balance between randomly allocated groups in a trial estimating the effect of electronic alcohol screening and brief intervention on alcohol consumption in hospital outpatients with hazardous or harmful drinking. Method: Trial participants were followed up 6. months after randomization (June-December 2013) using e-mails containing a hyperlink to a web-based questionnaire when possible and by post otherwise. Telephone follow-up was attempted after two written reminders and participants were invited to complete the questionnaire by telephone when contact was made. Results: Retention before telephone follow-up was 62.1% (520/837) and 82.8% (693/837) afterward: an increase of 20.7% (173/837). Therefore, 55% (95% CI 49%-60%) of the 317 participants who had not responded after two written reminders responded during or after the follow-up telephone call. Age. < . 55. years, a higher AUDIT-C score and provision of a mobile/cell phone number were predictive of questionnaire completion during or after telephone follow-up. Balance between randomly allocated groups was present before and after inclusion of participants who completed the questionnaire during or after telephone follow-up. Conclusion: Telephone follow-up improved retention in this randomized trial without affecting balance between the randomly allocated groups.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Volume

2

Start Page

746

End Page

749

Number of Pages

4

eISSN

2211-3355

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Additional Rights

This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

External Author Affiliations

University of Newcastle; Hunter Medical Research Institute; John Hunter Hospital; Boston University; Boston Medical Center; University of Queensland; University of Sydney; Hunter New England Local Health District Population Health; Hunter New England Local Health District Drug and Alcohol Clinical Services; University of York

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Preventive Medicine Reports