2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2020.106536
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Utility of digital Respondent Driven Sampling to recruit community-dwelling emerging adults for assessment of drinking and related risks

Abstract: Efficacious alcohol interventions with college drinkers are well established.• Emerging adult (EA) risky drinkers in communities are harder to reach.• Peer-driven Respondent Driven Sampling was adapted to a digital platform (d-RDS).• d-RDS recruited EAs at risk on drinking practices and alcohol-related consequences.• d-RDS offers a tool to extend alcohol interventions to this underserved risk group.

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Per standard RDS analysis procedures, the analysis sample excluded seeds who were purposively selected to start RDS and did not complete the survey. The resulting sample of peer recruits was examined for recruitment bias and analytic assumptions (Gile et al, 2015;Heckathorn, 1997Heckathorn, , 2002Tucker et al, 2020). Age, sex, race/ethnicity, and baseline drinking were checked for potential nonrandom recruitment (homophily) and independence from the nonrandomly selected seeds (equilibrium) over recruitment waves.…”
Section: Data Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Per standard RDS analysis procedures, the analysis sample excluded seeds who were purposively selected to start RDS and did not complete the survey. The resulting sample of peer recruits was examined for recruitment bias and analytic assumptions (Gile et al, 2015;Heckathorn, 1997Heckathorn, , 2002Tucker et al, 2020). Age, sex, race/ethnicity, and baseline drinking were checked for potential nonrandom recruitment (homophily) and independence from the nonrandomly selected seeds (equilibrium) over recruitment waves.…”
Section: Data Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bengtsson et al [ 16 ] discuss the ways in which multiple participation was prevented in their study but not remaining ways in which the system could have been exploited. Tucker et al [ 17 ] only state that ‘Chain development was checked regularly to identify duplicate or fake enrollment attempts, which were uncommon’. In contrast, we see online survey fraud as a serious and likely scenario, and we not only describe fraud attempts prevented by our system but also those that could not be prevented.…”
Section: The Two Key Challenges With Online Rdsmentioning
confidence: 99%