Abstract
Background. Differential distributions of sociodemographic characteristics and cognitive impairment in responders and non-responders may result in a biased prevalence estimate of dementia based on responders only. Methods. Responders (n = 2191) to a cross-sectional, two-stage community study were compared with regard to sociodemographic characteristics and cognition with three subgroups of non-responders: (A) subjects who refused to participate (n = 369), (B) subjects who were too ill or who had died prior to the screening (n = 72) and (C) subjects who had moved out of the study region or were not traceable (n = 23). Prevalence estimates specific for age and housing situation in responders and physicians' ratings of cognitive impairment were used to estimate the prevalence of dementia among non-responders. Results. Group A differed from responders in age and housing situation, group B in age, housing and cognition, and group C only in age. Separate prevalence estimates of dementia based on age, housing and cognition yielded figures for group A between 4.9% and 7.2%, for group B between 13.1% and 19.1%, and for group C between 2.6% and 4.2%. Joined with the prevalence rate among responders (6.5%) the best possible point estimate of the prevalence of dementia in the target population lies between 6.4% and 6.9%, i.e. within the 95% confidence interval (CI) of the prevalence among responders (5.4-7.5%). Conclusions. Although in this study non-response had no important influence on the overall prevalence, the findings among the distinct non-response subgroups point to the importance of describing non-response sociodemographically as well as in terms of the study objective. The authors recommend that non-responders are categorized into distinct groups based on the reason for non-response.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Boersma, F., Eefsting, J. A., Van Brink, W. D., & Van Tilburg, W. (1997). Characteristics of non-responders and the impact of non-response on prevalence estimates of dementia. International Journal of Epidemiology, 26(5), 1055–1062. https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/26.5.1055
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.