# Impact of Incentives and Contact Attempts on Recruitment of Long-Term Care Workforce

**Authors:** Soojeong Han, Gregory Alexander, Lusine Poghosyan, M Schrimpf, Sabrina Tasnova, Racheal Rodriguez, Hana Amer

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.2425 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study examines how incentives and repeated contact attempts affect recruitment of long-term care workers for a health information technology survey.

## Contribution

The study provides empirical evidence on the effectiveness of contact attempts and incentives in improving survey response rates among nursing home administrators.

## Key findings

- Approximately 64% of surveys were returned before any contact attempts.
- After up to 3 attempts, 88.83% of surveys were returned.
- Survey return rates did not increase beyond four attempts, regardless of increased incentives.

## Abstract

Depending on research topic, population, and setting, the ideal and reasonable amount of incentives and number of contact attempts are different, and even more than ten times of attempts is needed. The purpose of the parent study is to examine the impact of health information technology from the perspectives of the long-term care workforce. We encountered recruitment challenges and decided to contact participants multiple times and increase incentives to improve survey responses. This report aims to assess the trend of the survey response process among nursing home (NH) administrators. Out of 392 health information technology (HIT) maturity surveys of NH administrators who responded ‘yes’ to complete the survey, 206 HIT maturity surveys were returned, and 186 were not returned. Of the 206 administrators who returned the survey, 41 returned without claiming any incentive, 143 received $25, 5 received $50, and 17 received $75. Our study demonstrates that approximately 64% (n = 132) returned the survey before attempts. After up to 3 attempts, 88.83% (n = 183) returned the survey. Beyond four attempts, survey return rate did not increase regardless of increased incentive. A Chi-square test revealed a significant association between the category of attempt number (Low: 0-3 vs. Medium/High:4-10+) and survey return, χ²(1, N = 392) = 20.09, p < .0001. Future research can build upon the findings of this study by considering contact attempts and incentives to balance recruitment efforts with the pressure or burden of multiple contact attempts during recruitment and not to compromise the voluntary nature of participation.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12761315