Examining the effect of weight‐related recruitment information on participant characteristics: A randomized field experiment

Author:

Wang Christy1ORCID,Hunger Jeffrey M.2,Liao Joseph1,Figueroa David1,Lopez Alejandra1,Tomiyama A. Janet1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology University of California Los Angeles California USA

2. Department of Psychology Miami University Miami Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveAlthough 82% of American adults have a body mass index (BMI) of over 25, individuals with elevated BMI are considered difficult to recruit for studies. Effective participant identification and recruitment are crucial to minimize the likelihood of sampling bias. One understudied factor that could lead to sampling bias is the study information presented in recruitment materials. In the context of weight research, potential participants with higher weight may avoid studies that advertise weight‐related procedures. Thus, this study experimentally manipulated the phrasing of weight‐related information included in recruitment materials and examined its impact on participants' characteristics.MethodsTwo visually similar flyers, either weight‐salient or neutral, were randomly posted throughout a university campus to recruit participants (N = 300) for a short survey, assessing their internalized weight bias, anticipated and experienced stigmatizing experiences, eating habits, and general demographic characteristics.ResultsAlthough the weight‐salient (vs. neutral) flyer took 18.5 days longer to recruit the target sample size, there were no between flyer differences in respondents' internalized weight bias, anticipated/experienced weight stigma, disordered eating behaviors, BMI, or perceived weight. Absolute levels of these variables, however, were low overall.ConclusionProviding detailed information about study procedures allows participants to have more autonomy over their participation without differentially affecting participant characteristics.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference35 articles.

1. FryarCD CarrollMD AffulJ.Prevalence of Overweight Obesity and Severe Obesity Among Adults Aged 20 and over: United States 1960–1962 through 2017–2018.NCHS Health E‐Stats.

2. Does Self-Selection Affect Samples’ Representativeness in Online Surveys? An Investigation in Online Video Game Research

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