The use of online methods to recruit and follow a hard‐to‐reach population in the Peer Alternatives for Addiction Study 2021 Cohort

Author:

Zemore Sarah E.1ORCID,Delk Joanne1ORCID,Mericle Amy A.1,Martinez Priscilla1ORCID,Timko Christine23

Affiliation:

1. Alcohol Research Group Emeryville California USA

2. Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA

3. Veterans Affairs (VA) Palo Alto Health Care System Menlo Park California USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAlthough studies are increasingly adopting online protocols, few such studies in the addiction field have comprehensively described their data review procedures and successes in detecting low‐quality/fraudulent data. The current study describes data collection protocols and outcomes of a large, longitudinal study (the PAL Study 2021) that implemented online design elements to study individuals seeking peer support for an alcohol use disorder.MethodsIn 2021, the PAL Study collaborated with mutual‐help group (MHG) partners and recovery‐related organizations to recruit individuals attending a 12‐step group, Women for Sobriety (WFS), LifeRing Secular Recovery, and/or SMART Recovery for an alcohol problem in‐person and/or online in the prior 30 days. Participation was solicited both online and in‐person. Individuals accessed baseline surveys via an open web link; follow‐ups occurred at 6 and 12 months. Analyses included calculating the proportion of surveys eliminated in data quality review; comparing MHG subsamples to internal survey (benchmark) data for Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), WFS, LifeRing, and SMART; and examining response rates and attrition.ResultsAlthough 93% of respondents who opened the baseline survey completed it, 87% of baseline surveys were eliminated in data quality review (final N = 531). Nonetheless, cleaned MHG subsamples were generally similar to benchmark samples on gender, age, race/ethnicity, and education. Follow‐up rates for the cleaned sample were 88% (6 months) and 85% (12 months). Analyses revealed some differences in attrition by gender, primary MHG, and lifetime drug problems, but there was no evidence of greater attrition among those in earlier/less stable recovery.ConclusionsStudy methods appear to have produced a valid, largely representative sample of the hard‐to‐reach target population that was successfully followed across 12 months. However, given the high survey elimination rate and need for extensive data review, we recommend that researchers avoid open‐link designs and include comprehensive data review when incorporating online design elements.

Funder

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Publisher

Wiley

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