Viability of Web-Based Respondent-Driven Sampling of Belgian Men Who Have Sex With Men: Process Evaluation
Estrelle Thunnissen, Veerle Buffel, Linda Campbell, Bea Vuylsteke, Philippe Bos, Edwin Wouters

TL;DR
This study evaluates whether web-based respondent-driven sampling can effectively sample Belgian men who have sex with men for sexual health research.
Contribution
The study adapts the Medical Research Council framework to evaluate WEB RDS viability in a European context.
Findings
WEB RDS did not yield a sufficient sample size for valid population estimates in Belgium.
Digital etiquette and low research motivation among participants hindered recruitment.
A moderate incentive failed to overcome recruitment barriers.
Abstract
Obtaining a representative sample is a substantial challenge when undertaking health research among hidden and hard-to-reach populations such as men who have sex with men Web-based respondent-driven sampling (WEB RDS) was developed to overcome such sampling challenges and to create population estimates based on network and sampling characteristics. Despite a decade of research, it remains unclear whether WEB RDS is suitable for sampling hidden populations such as men who have sex with men. This study aims to evaluate how viable the WEB RDS methodology is for obtaining a nationwide sample of men who have sex with men, suitable for population inference of sexual health characteristics, in Belgium. We adapted the Medical Resource Council process evaluation framework for interventions, to evaluate an empirical WEB RDS. Viewing “WEB RDS” as a complex intervention with respondent-driven…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk
