Representativeness of two sampling procedures for an internet intervention targeting cancer-related distress: a comparison of convenience and registry samples.

TitleRepresentativeness of two sampling procedures for an internet intervention targeting cancer-related distress: a comparison of convenience and registry samples.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsOwen JE, Bantum EO'Carroll, Criswell K, Bazzo J, Gorlick A, Stanton AL
JournalJ Behav Med
Volume37
Issue4
Pagination630-41
Date Published2014 Aug
ISSN1573-3521
KeywordsAge Factors, Clinical Trials as Topic, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Internet, Male, Middle Aged, Mood Disorders, Neoplasm Staging, Neoplasms, Patient Selection, Quality of Life, Registries, Reproducibility of Results, Selection Bias, Self Report, Sex Factors, Social Support, Stress, Psychological, Surveys and Questionnaires, Survivors, United States
Abstract

Internet interventions often rely on convenience sampling, yet convenience samples may differ in important ways from systematic recruitment approaches. The purpose of this study was to evaluate potential demographic, medical, and psychosocial differences between Internet-recruited and registry-recruited cancer survivors in an Internet-based intervention. Participants were recruited from a cancer registry (n = 80) and via broad Internet outreach efforts (n = 160). Participants completed a set of self-report questionnaires, and both samples were compared to a population-based sample of cancer survivors (n = 5,150). The Internet sample was younger, better educated, more likely to be female, had longer time since diagnosis, and had more advanced stage of disease (p's < .001), and the registry-sample was over-represented by men and those with prostate or other cancer types (p's < .001). The Internet sample also exhibited lower quality of life and social support and greater mood disturbance (p's < .001). Understanding how convenience and systematic samples differ has important implications for external validity and potential for dissemination of Internet-based interventions.

DOI10.1007/s10865-013-9509-6
Alternate JournalJ Behav Med
PubMed ID23645145
PubMed Central IDPMC3842405
Grant List1R03CA137391-01A1 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
R03 CA137391 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States