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Recruitment and participation of a survey in a public–private primary care setting: experience from the QUALICOPC Malaysia

AIM: The purpose of this paper is to describe the recruitment strategies, the response rates and the reasons for non-response of Malaysian public and private primary care doctors in an international survey on the quality, cost and equity in primary care. BACKGROUND: Low research participation by pri...

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Autores principales: Husin, Masliyana, Ab Rahman, Norazida, Wong, Xin Ci, Mohamad Noh, Kamaliah, Tong, Seng Fah, Schäfer, Willemijn, Boerma, Wienke, Atun, Rifat, Sivasampu, Sheamini
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7681175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33213564
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1463423620000511
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author Husin, Masliyana
Ab Rahman, Norazida
Wong, Xin Ci
Mohamad Noh, Kamaliah
Tong, Seng Fah
Schäfer, Willemijn
Boerma, Wienke
Atun, Rifat
Sivasampu, Sheamini
author_facet Husin, Masliyana
Ab Rahman, Norazida
Wong, Xin Ci
Mohamad Noh, Kamaliah
Tong, Seng Fah
Schäfer, Willemijn
Boerma, Wienke
Atun, Rifat
Sivasampu, Sheamini
author_sort Husin, Masliyana
collection PubMed
description AIM: The purpose of this paper is to describe the recruitment strategies, the response rates and the reasons for non-response of Malaysian public and private primary care doctors in an international survey on the quality, cost and equity in primary care. BACKGROUND: Low research participation by primary care doctors, especially those working in the private sector, is a challenge to quality benchmarking. METHODS: Primary care doctors were sampled through multi-stage sampling. The first stage-sampling unit was the primary care clinics, which were randomly sampled from five states in Malaysia to reflect their proportions in two strata – sector (public/private) and location (urban/rural). Strategies through endorsement, personalised invitation, face-to-face interview and non-monetary incentives were used to recruit public and private doctors. Data collection was carried out by fieldworkers through structured questionnaires. FINDINGS: A total of 221 public and 239 private doctors participated in the study. Among the public doctors, 99.5% response rates were obtained. Among the private doctors, a 32.8% response rate was obtained. Totally, 30% of private clinics were uncontactable by telephone, and when these were excluded, the overall response rate is 46.8%. The response rate of the private clinics across the states ranges from 31.5% to 34.0%. A total of 167 answered the non-respondent questionnaire. Among the non-respondents, 77.4 % were male and 22.6% female (P = 0.011). There were 33.6% of doctors older than 65 years (P = 0.003) and 15.9% were from the state of Sarawak (P = 0.016) when compared to non-respondents. Reason for non-participation included being too busy (51.8%), not interested (32.9%), not having enough patients (9.1%) and did not find it beneficial (7.9%). Our study demonstrated the feasibility of obtaining favourable response rate in a survey involving doctors from public and private primary care settings
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spelling pubmed-76811752020-12-03 Recruitment and participation of a survey in a public–private primary care setting: experience from the QUALICOPC Malaysia Husin, Masliyana Ab Rahman, Norazida Wong, Xin Ci Mohamad Noh, Kamaliah Tong, Seng Fah Schäfer, Willemijn Boerma, Wienke Atun, Rifat Sivasampu, Sheamini Prim Health Care Res Dev Research AIM: The purpose of this paper is to describe the recruitment strategies, the response rates and the reasons for non-response of Malaysian public and private primary care doctors in an international survey on the quality, cost and equity in primary care. BACKGROUND: Low research participation by primary care doctors, especially those working in the private sector, is a challenge to quality benchmarking. METHODS: Primary care doctors were sampled through multi-stage sampling. The first stage-sampling unit was the primary care clinics, which were randomly sampled from five states in Malaysia to reflect their proportions in two strata – sector (public/private) and location (urban/rural). Strategies through endorsement, personalised invitation, face-to-face interview and non-monetary incentives were used to recruit public and private doctors. Data collection was carried out by fieldworkers through structured questionnaires. FINDINGS: A total of 221 public and 239 private doctors participated in the study. Among the public doctors, 99.5% response rates were obtained. Among the private doctors, a 32.8% response rate was obtained. Totally, 30% of private clinics were uncontactable by telephone, and when these were excluded, the overall response rate is 46.8%. The response rate of the private clinics across the states ranges from 31.5% to 34.0%. A total of 167 answered the non-respondent questionnaire. Among the non-respondents, 77.4 % were male and 22.6% female (P = 0.011). There were 33.6% of doctors older than 65 years (P = 0.003) and 15.9% were from the state of Sarawak (P = 0.016) when compared to non-respondents. Reason for non-participation included being too busy (51.8%), not interested (32.9%), not having enough patients (9.1%) and did not find it beneficial (7.9%). Our study demonstrated the feasibility of obtaining favourable response rate in a survey involving doctors from public and private primary care settings Cambridge University Press 2020-11-20 /pmc/articles/PMC7681175/ /pubmed/33213564 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1463423620000511 Text en © Cambridge University Press 2020 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Husin, Masliyana
Ab Rahman, Norazida
Wong, Xin Ci
Mohamad Noh, Kamaliah
Tong, Seng Fah
Schäfer, Willemijn
Boerma, Wienke
Atun, Rifat
Sivasampu, Sheamini
Recruitment and participation of a survey in a public–private primary care setting: experience from the QUALICOPC Malaysia
title Recruitment and participation of a survey in a public–private primary care setting: experience from the QUALICOPC Malaysia
title_full Recruitment and participation of a survey in a public–private primary care setting: experience from the QUALICOPC Malaysia
title_fullStr Recruitment and participation of a survey in a public–private primary care setting: experience from the QUALICOPC Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Recruitment and participation of a survey in a public–private primary care setting: experience from the QUALICOPC Malaysia
title_short Recruitment and participation of a survey in a public–private primary care setting: experience from the QUALICOPC Malaysia
title_sort recruitment and participation of a survey in a public–private primary care setting: experience from the qualicopc malaysia
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7681175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33213564
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1463423620000511
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