Evaluation of the Total Design Method in a survey of Japanese dentists

BMC Medical Research Methodology - Tập 5 - Trang 1-9 - 2005
Yukie Nakai1, Peter Milgrom2, Toshiko Yoshida1, Chikako Ishihara1, Tsutomu Shimono1
1Department of Behavioral Pediatric Dentistry, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama, Japan
2Department of Dental Public Heath Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, USA

Tóm tắt

This study assessed the application of the Total Design Method (TDM) in a mail survey of Japanese dentists. The TDM was chosen because survey response rates in Japan are unacceptably low and the TDM had previously been used in a general population survey. Four hundred and seventy eight dentist members of the Okayama Medical and Dental Practitioner's Association were surveyed. The nine-page, 27-item questionnaire covered dentist job satisfaction, physical practice, and dentist and patient characteristics. Respondents to the first mailing or the one-week follow-up postcard were defined as early responders; others who responded were late responders. Responder bias was assessed by examining age, gender and training. The overall response rate was 46.7% (223/478). The response rates by follow-up mailing were, 18% after the first mailing, 35.4% after the follow-up postcard, 42.3% after the second mailing, and 46.7% after the third mailing. Respondents did not differ from non-respondents in age or gender, nor were there differences between early and late responders. The application of TDM in this survey of Japanese dentists produced lower rates of response than expected from previous Japanese and US studies.

Tài liệu tham khảo

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