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Questionnaire Design

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Questionnaire Validation Many existing questionnaires can be used or adapted eg SF-36 Validated Others e.g. for an outbreak have not been validated and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Questionnaire Design


1
Questionnaire Design
EPIET Introductory Course 2003 VERYIER DU LAC,
FRANCE
P McKeown
2
So far
  • Introduction
  • Outbreak or Incident
  • Salmonella in Northern Ireland
  • Steps in investigation
  • Surveillance

? Questionnaire Design
Disease Detectives
? Looking for clues
? Building a case
3
Objectives
  • To understand
  • Why we use questionnaires
  • The objectives of a questionnaire
  • The advantages and disadvantages of
    questionnaires
  • The different types of questions that can be used
    and the circumstances in which they would be used
  • The way in which questionnaires can be designed
    and how to avoid some common problems and pitfalls

4
What is a questionnaire?
  • An instrument (form) to collect answers to
    questions
  • Collects factual data gathers information or
    measures
  • A series of written questions / items in a fixed,
    rational order
  • Every item is answered (unless instructed
    otherwise)
  • Who completes it?
  • The respondent public/professional
  • Someone on behalf of the respondent
  • The interviewer

5
Types of Questionnaire
  • Prospective or retrospective
  • Completed by participant or researcher
  • Advantages of self-administered include
  • Cheap and easy to administer
  • Preserve confidentiality
  • Can be completed at respondent's convenience
  • Can be administered in a standard manner

6
Types of Questionnaire
  • Advantages of interview-administered include
  • participation by illiterate people
  • clarification of ambiguity
  • They can be administered face to face, via the
    telephone, by post or email

7
What makes an effective questionnaire?
  • An effective questionnaire is highly structured
    to allow the same types of information to be
    simply collected from a large number of people in
    the same way so that the data can be analysed
    quantitatively and systematically

8
And why do we want one?
  • A well designed questionnaire
  • Will give you appropriate data which should allow
    you to answer your research question
  • Will minimise potential sources of bias, thus
    increasing the validity of the questionnaire
  • People are much more likely to complete a well
    designed questionnaire

9
Assumptions
  • The use of questionnaires is based on certain
    assumptions
  • That individuals will have had common
    understanding of particular issues and will share
    general beliefs
  • (went to a wedding/ that we are trying to find
    out more about meningitis because this disease is
    a threat to our children and young people)
  • That this understanding and these beliefs are
    shared and can be clearly expressed and quantified

10
Before starting..
  • Questionnaire design should be an integral part
    of the study, not an add-on
  • Therefore
  • Decide on the goals of the study (for yourself
    and for others)
  • Know the subject literature, experts
  • Know the respondents - (SEG, occupation, special
    sensitivities, educational, ethnic)
  • Know how much cost, time, sample size, response
    rate

11
Fundamental Principle
  • An epidemiological investigation is a scientific
    loop that tests a hypothesis

Problem
Hypothesis
Question
Answer
Study
Results
Questionnaire
12
Objectives of a questionnaire
  • To maximise the proportion of subjects answering
    the questionnaire as high a response rate as
    possible
  • To ensure that the information obtained is as
    accurate and as relevant to our study as possible
  • as simple and as focussed as possible

13
Advantages of questionnaires
  • Can reach a large number of people relatively
    easily and economically (especially postal
    questionnaires)
  • Provide quantifiable answers
  • Relatively easy to analyse

14
Disadvantages of questionnaires
  • May provide only limited insight into the
    problem
  • Limited response allowed by questions
  • You may not have asked the right questions eg
    Andorra, norovirus and ice-cubes
  • Varying response
  • they may not understand your question and may
    intrepret it differently
  • Postal questionnaires ? low response rate
  • Hard to chase after missing data need to get it
    right first time

15
Stages in designing a questionnaire
  • Decide on aim of the study and the purpose of
    using a questionnaire
  • Decide on content of the questions
  • Decide on the format of the questions
  • Decide on presentation and layout
  • Formulate coding schedule (if appropriate)
  • Pilot and refine questionnaire

16
Basic Rules
  • KISS ? keep it short and simple
  • Appearance is crucial and affects
  • Response rate
  • Ease of data summarisation and analysis
  • Length of questionnaire shorter ? ?response
    rates
  • Question order is important
  • Easy ? difficult
  • General ? particular
  • Factual ? abstract
  • Start with closed format questions.
  • Start with questions relevant to the main
    subject.
  • Try to avoid starting with demographic and
    personal questions

17
Basic Rules
  • Number all items and pages
  • Put an identifying mark on all pages
  • Put the return address on the questionnaire
  • Put the study title in bold on the first page
  • Print directions in bold
  • Remember the Unique Identifier

18
Basic Rules
  • Group questions by topic or response options
  • Dont put the most important item last
  • Open with relevant non-threatening questions
  • It is most likely to be completed if easy on the
    eye, relevant, logical and as short as possible.

19
Content of Questions
  • Keep a clear focus on your research question
  • Literature search what do we need to know in
    order to ask the most relevant and probing
    questions?
  • Demographic information
  • Contact information (if non-anonymised)

20
Format of Questions
  • Ask only for the information you need
  • Start with simple questions get them on your
    side
  • Appropriate for responding audience eg middle
    class wedding guests vs prisoners
  • Keep sentences simple and short

21
Format of Questions
  • Ask for one piece of information at a time
  • If you had not passed water for 6 hours but were
    watching a James Bond movie, and your wife
    brought you a sandwich would you get up to go to
    the toilet in the next 20 minutes? Y/N
  • Remember dont know

22
Format of Questions
  • Be precise Do you often have to get up at night
    to pass water? Y/N
  • Be appropriate/sensitive bowel habits
  • Aim always to minimise bias

23
Bias in Questions
  • Information Bias systematic differences in the
    measurement of a response
  • Recall bias eg cases being more likely to
    remember than controls
  • Observer bias inter and intra a questionnaire
    is an important way to reduce this
  • Non-response bias
  • Those who respond are different from those who do
    not
  • Reduce by ensuring high response rate or
  • Correcting for during analysis (eg age, sex, SEG)

24
Format of questions
  • Two main question formats
  • Closed format ? give a fixed response
  • Open format ? allow people to express their
    views in their own words
  • What is your most distressing symptom? Please
    describe ________________________________________
    __________________________________________________
    ______

25
Open or Closed?
  • Closed forced choice
  • Simple and quick
  • Reduces discrimination against those who are less
    literate
  • Easy to code, record, and analyse results
    quantitatively
  • Easy to report results
  • Open format free text
  • Allows exploration of issues
  • Can be used even if a comprehensive range of
    alternative choices cannot be compiled

26
Closed Questions
  • A number of types
  • Straightforward response
  • What is your age in years? _____ yrs
  • How long have you worked for Company X? _____
  • What is your sex (gender)? M ? F ?
  • Did you stay in Hotel X on 23/6/02? Y ? N
    ?
  • Did you eat dinner in the company canteen
  • on 23/6/02? Y ? N ?

27
Closed Questions
  • 2. Checklist
  • Which of the following did you eat for dinner on
    23/6/02?
  • Chicken ?
  • Beef ?
  • Ham ?
  • Salad ?
  • Egg mayonnaise ?

28
Closed Questions
  • 3. Adjectival/adverbial responses
  • Are you limited by hip pain during any of the
    following activities?
  • Not at all Slightly Moderately
    Severely
  • Walking ? ?
    ? ?
  • Sitting ? ?
    ? ?
  • Lying in bed ? ?
    ? ?

29
Closed Questions
  • 4. Numerical rating scale
  • How useful would you think a community methadone
    clinic in your area would be? (please circle)
  • 1 2 3 4 5 6
    7
  • Not at all useful Very useful

30
Closed Questions
  • 5. Visual analogue scale
  • At rest, how bad is your hip pain?
  • (please mark where on the line below)

No pain
Worst pain imaginable
31
Closed Questions
  • 6. Ranking scales
  • Please rank these activities in order of the
    amount of pain they cause you. (1 would be most
    pain and 4 would be least)
  • Sitting ?
  • Running ?
  • Lying in bed ?
  • Walking ?

32
Closed Questions
  • 7. Scales for measuring attitude eg Lickert
  • A local methadone clinic would be useful for my
    community
  • No, I strongly disagree ?
  • No, I disagree quite a lot ?
  • No, I disagree just a little ?
  • Im not sure about this ?
  • Yes, I agree just a little ?
  • Yes, I agree quite a lot ?
  • Yes, I strongly agree ?

33
Open Questions
  • Used to provide fuller information
  • Open, free-text form
  • Often used in qualitative research, focus groups,
    at the preliminary and piloting stage of
    questionnaires
  • What do you think is the reason you became ill?
    ________________________________________________
  • Do you think service X would make your life
    easier? If so, in what way? If not, why not?
    __________________________________________________
    ______________________________________________

34
Problems and Pitfalls
  • Avoid questions that ask two things at once - you
    wont know which bit people are answering
  • Have you ever had neck pain and diarrhoea?
  • Ambiguity.....
  • e.g. Do you got to the toilet a lot?

35
Problems and Pitfalls
  • Avoid jargon
  • How often do you get up at night to PU? (pass
    urine)
  • Should IVDUs be treated in the community?
  • Avoid options that are not mutually exclusive
    when they need to be
  • What age are you?
  • 16-20 ?
  • 20-25 ?
  • 25-30 ?
  • 35-40 ?

36
Problems and Pitfalls
  • Avoid leading questions
  • Do you think that the food in the hotel made you
    sick?
  • Did the hotel staff seem unhygenic to you?
  • Do you agree that the hospital staff were close
    to exhaustion?
  • Avoid making the questionnaire too long
  • Typographical / spelling errors
  • Questionaire
  • Diahurria
  • Vommit
  • Eppidemiology

37
Ensuring a High Response Rate
  • Make the questionnaire relevant
  • Ensure respondents see its potential and
    usefulness (we are trying to find out why you and
    your family/people in became ill while holidaying
    in this resort)

38
Ensuring a High Response Rate
  • Include a brief covering letter
  • Who you are
  • Who you work for
  • Why you are investigating/researching
  • Where you obtained the respondents name
  • How and where you can be contacted
  • Absolute guarantee of confidentiality
  • Self-addressed envelope!!

39
Questionnaire Validation
  • Many existing questionnaires can be used or
    adapted eg SF-36
  • Validated
  • Others e.g. for an outbreak have not been
    validated and will need to be tested
  • Piloting is a common way of doing this

40
Piloting and Evaluation
  • Pilot with a similar group of people to your
    intended subjects
  • Piloting a essential
  • Highlights problems before starting
  • Often concentrates initially on effects of
    alternative wording
  • Then will concentrate on respondents and
    interviewers overall impressions
  • With a final polishing after several amendments
    to ensure response rate

41
Presentation and layout
  • Decide on the order of the items / questions
  • Where to place sensitive questions?
  • Make the layout clear, consistent and easy on the
    eye
  • Try to get on overall simple feel
  • Ensure there is adequate space to answer
  • Choose a large enough font size
  • Avoid flippancy
  • Avoid fancy logos/printed on recycled paper/is an
    equal opportunity employer etc
  • Do not slip to another page

42
Presentation and layout
  • Using colour or printing questionnaire on
    coloured paper may help
  • Use filter questions, if necessary
  • Give clear instructions about how to answer the
    questions

43
Coding Schedule
  • Questionnaire can be pre-coded
  • Quicker and easier to hands responses prior to
    data entry eh Epi-Info or SPSS
  • Examples
  • M1 F2 DK3
  • Ill1 Not ill2 DK3
  • Single1 Married2 Separated3 Divorced4 DK5
  • No medical intervention1 Saw GP2 Went OPD3
    Admitted Hospital4 Admitted ICU5 Died6 DK7

44
Summary
  • A well designed questionnaire
  • Will give you appropriate data which should allow
    you to answer your research question
  • Will minimise potential sources of bias, thus
    increasing the validity of the questionnaire
  • People are much more likely to complete a well
    designed questionnaire

45
FINALLY, keep your questionnaire short and the
questions simple, focussed and appropriate
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