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Investigating the effect of providing monetary incentives to participants on completion rates of referred co-respondents: An embedded randomized controlled trial. Study within a trial (SWAT) protocol

Investigating the effect of providing monetary incentives to participants on completion rates of referred co-respondents: An embedded randomized controlled trial. Study within a trial (SWAT) protocol
Investigating the effect of providing monetary incentives to participants on completion rates of referred co-respondents: An embedded randomized controlled trial. Study within a trial (SWAT) protocol
Background: parent-report questionnaires are a common method of generating data on child outcomes in mental health studies. A second report from another person who knows the child (co-respondent) is implemented to reduce bias and increase objectivity. The success of this approach is dependent on the engagement of co-respondents, which can be difficult. Financial incentives are used to increase data return in clinical trials, and to promote referral rates in online marketing. This protocol describes the use of an embedded randomised controlled trial (RCT) to investigate the effect of financial incentives on rates of co-respondent data completion. In the host RCT (of an online intervention designed to reduce the impact of a parent's anxiety on their child) index participants (i.e. parents) are asked to invite a co-respondent to complete measures on the index child. This study will test the hypothesis that providing monetary incentives to index participants will increase the outcome measure completion rate of co-respondents.

Methods: embedded RCT of two parallel groups. Participants in the intervention arm will be sent a £10 voucher if their chosen co-respondent completes online baseline measures. Participants in the control arm will not be offered payment regardless of their chosen co-respondent's behaviour. 1754 participants will take part. Analysis will compare co-respondent outcome measure completion rates between the two arms at baseline and follow-up.

Conclusion: findings from this study will provide evidence on the impact of offering payment to index participants on return rates of co-respondent data. This will inform resource allocation within future clinical trials.
Co-respondents, Data collection, Digital interventions, Embedded RCT, Incentivization
2451-8654
Dunn, Abby
a0ae8811-aa28-4af7-a178-3492e177b54a
Alvarez, James
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Arbon, Amy
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Bremner, Stephen
0e117fa6-27ea-41cc-9523-70f90cd65bc0
Elsby-Pearson, Chloe
04e687f2-6fc4-4089-8e64-e1f70fe564a2
Emsley, Richard
befe7b94-728c-47aa-84db-4f066d5f4836
Jones, Christopher
e705c242-4dd2-42b2-a8d3-d25ef5b6c954
Lawrence, Peter
0d45e107-38ef-4932-aec1-504573de01ef
Lester, Kathryn J
96b72562-9017-4343-8297-6f6cf6756027
Majdandžić, Mirjana
aa872690-0555-4ce5-8170-aa7fa542ece3
Dunn, Abby
a0ae8811-aa28-4af7-a178-3492e177b54a
Alvarez, James
c1b9e933-c803-4555-84bd-c5bbfc212b52
Arbon, Amy
f2b3b84b-4cd1-41d8-9914-e9cd54df7d2d
Bremner, Stephen
0e117fa6-27ea-41cc-9523-70f90cd65bc0
Elsby-Pearson, Chloe
04e687f2-6fc4-4089-8e64-e1f70fe564a2
Emsley, Richard
befe7b94-728c-47aa-84db-4f066d5f4836
Jones, Christopher
e705c242-4dd2-42b2-a8d3-d25ef5b6c954
Lawrence, Peter
0d45e107-38ef-4932-aec1-504573de01ef
Lester, Kathryn J
96b72562-9017-4343-8297-6f6cf6756027
Majdandžić, Mirjana
aa872690-0555-4ce5-8170-aa7fa542ece3

Dunn, Abby, Alvarez, James, Arbon, Amy, Bremner, Stephen, Elsby-Pearson, Chloe, Emsley, Richard, Jones, Christopher, Lawrence, Peter, Lester, Kathryn J and Majdandžić, Mirjana (2023) Investigating the effect of providing monetary incentives to participants on completion rates of referred co-respondents: An embedded randomized controlled trial. Study within a trial (SWAT) protocol. Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications, 32, [101090]. (doi:10.1016/j.conctc.2023.101090).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: parent-report questionnaires are a common method of generating data on child outcomes in mental health studies. A second report from another person who knows the child (co-respondent) is implemented to reduce bias and increase objectivity. The success of this approach is dependent on the engagement of co-respondents, which can be difficult. Financial incentives are used to increase data return in clinical trials, and to promote referral rates in online marketing. This protocol describes the use of an embedded randomised controlled trial (RCT) to investigate the effect of financial incentives on rates of co-respondent data completion. In the host RCT (of an online intervention designed to reduce the impact of a parent's anxiety on their child) index participants (i.e. parents) are asked to invite a co-respondent to complete measures on the index child. This study will test the hypothesis that providing monetary incentives to index participants will increase the outcome measure completion rate of co-respondents.

Methods: embedded RCT of two parallel groups. Participants in the intervention arm will be sent a £10 voucher if their chosen co-respondent completes online baseline measures. Participants in the control arm will not be offered payment regardless of their chosen co-respondent's behaviour. 1754 participants will take part. Analysis will compare co-respondent outcome measure completion rates between the two arms at baseline and follow-up.

Conclusion: findings from this study will provide evidence on the impact of offering payment to index participants on return rates of co-respondent data. This will inform resource allocation within future clinical trials.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 13 February 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 February 2023
Published date: April 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: Funding for the trial provided by the Kavli Trust [ 38/19 ] with support from the University of Sussex . Publisher Copyright: © 2023
Keywords: Co-respondents, Data collection, Digital interventions, Embedded RCT, Incentivization

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475621
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475621
ISSN: 2451-8654
PURE UUID: df308ded-e7c7-4b89-950c-698c8c352bc1
ORCID for Peter Lawrence: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6181-433X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 22 Mar 2023 17:44
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:34

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Contributors

Author: Abby Dunn
Author: James Alvarez
Author: Amy Arbon
Author: Stephen Bremner
Author: Chloe Elsby-Pearson
Author: Richard Emsley
Author: Christopher Jones
Author: Peter Lawrence ORCID iD
Author: Kathryn J Lester
Author: Mirjana Majdandžić

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