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Selective attrition in longitudinal studies: effective processes for Facebook tracing

Shannon K. Bennetts, Jasmine Love, Naomi J. Hackworth, Fiona Mensah, Elizabeth Westrupp, Donna Berthelsen, Penny Levickis, Clair Bennett, Jan M. Nicholson

2020International Journal of Social Research Methodology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Participant attrition is a significant challenge for longitudinal studies, particularly those involving disadvantaged populations. We attempted to re-engage n = 990 families in a five-year follow-up of a randomised controlled trial of an early childhood parenting intervention. Tracing was attempted for n = 90/990 (9.1%) uncontactable participants. Evidence for the identification of a matching Facebook profile was classified as strong, moderate or weak. A private message was sent to those with strong evidence (n = 63/90, 70.0%), of which 32 responded, 22 agreed to participate and 19 provided data. Compared to participants engaged using traditional methods, those re-engaged through Facebook were more likely at initial recruitment to have a younger child (p =.02), to be a single parent (p =.04), less educated (p <.001), lower income (p =.01) and in an unemployed household (p <.001). Findings suggest that social media can be an effective engagement tool, helping to minimise overall and selective attrition in longitudinal studies, particularly for hard-to-reach populations.

Topics & Concepts

AttritionDisadvantagedLongitudinal studyPsychologyIntervention (counseling)Social mediaMatching (statistics)Propensity score matchingLow incomeDevelopmental psychologyMedicineSociologySocioeconomicsPsychiatryPolitical scienceDentistryInternal medicinePathologyLawHealth Literacy and Information AccessibilityAdolescent and Pediatric HealthcareSocial Media in Health Education
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