Abstract

BackgroundWorsening socioeconomic conditions in rural America have been fueling increases in chronic disease and poor health. The goal of this study was to identify cost-effective methods of deploying geographically targeted health surveys in rural areas, which often have limited resources. These health surveys were administered in New York’s rural Sullivan County, which has some of the poorest health outcomes in the entire state.MethodsComparisons were made for response rates, estimated costs, respondent demographics, and prevalence estimates of a brief health survey delivered by mail and phone using address-based sampling, and in-person using convenience sampling at a sub-county level in New York’s rural Sullivan County during 2017.ResultsOverall response rates were 27.0% by mail, 8.2% by phone, and 71.4% for convenience in-person surveys. Costs to perform phone surveys were substantially higher than mailed or convenience in-person surveys. All modalities had lower proportions of Hispanic respondents compared to Census estimates. Unadjusted and age-adjusted prevalence estimates were similar between mailed and in-person surveys, but not for phone surveys.ConclusionsThese findings are consistent with declining response rates of phone surveys, which obtained an inadequate sample of rural residents. Though in-person surveys had higher response rates, convenience sampling failed to obtain a geographically distributed sample of rural residents. Of modalities tested, mailed surveys provided the best opportunity to perform geographically targeted rural health surveillance.

Highlights

  • Though 60 million Americans live in rural areas, their health issues are often understudied [1]

  • Using standardized AAPOR (American Association for Public Opinion Research) definitions, we reported contact (CON1), cooperation (COOP2), and eligibility (ELR) rates

  • Of the 152 surveys successfully delivered to eligible addresses in ZIP code 12754, the cooperation rate was 31.6%

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Summary

Introduction

Though 60 million Americans live in rural areas, their health issues are often understudied [1]. Existing surveys confirm that rural health burdens are substantial, but programs to address these needs are underfunded and few are guided by local surveillance [2] To compound these problems, worsening socioeconomic conditions in rural America have been fueling increases in chronic. In a rural area like New York’s Sullivan County, these annual assessments capture responses for only 40 to 50 of its nearly 60,000 adult residents This small sample size makes it impossible to provide a geographically detailed assessment of how disease burden varies at a sub-county level [9]. The goal of this study was to identify cost-effective methods of deploying geographically targeted health surveys in rural areas, which often have limited resources These health surveys were administered in New York’s rural Sullivan County, which has some of the poorest health outcomes in the entire state

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