Difference between revisions of "Ten Steps to Design a Questionnaire"

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'''FEM PAGE CONTRIBUTORS 2007'''
 
'''FEM PAGE CONTRIBUTORS 2007'''
 
;Editors
 
;Editors

Latest revision as of 18:30, 10 April 2023

Designing a questionnaire involves 10 main steps:

Write a study protocol

This involves getting acquainted with the subject, conducting a literature review, deciding on objectives, formulating a hypothesis, and defining the main information needed to test the hypothesis.

Draw a plan of analysis

This step determines how the information defined in Step 1 should be analysed. The analysis plan should contain the measures of association and the statistical tests you intend to use. In addition, you should draw dummy tables with the information of interest. The analysis plan will help you determine which type of results you want to obtain. An example of a dummy table is shown below.

Exposure nr Cases (%) Total Attack Rate RR (CI95%)
Tomato salad
Chicken breast

Draw a list of the information needed

From the plan of analysis, you can draw a list of the information you need to collect from participants. In this step, you should determine the type and format of variables needed.

Design different parts of the questionnaire

You can start now designing different parts of the questionnaire using this list of needed information.

Write the questions

Knowing the education and occupation level of the study population, ethnic or migration background, language knowledge and special sensitivities at this step is crucial at this stage. Please remember that the questionnaire needs to be adapted to your study population. Please see the "Format of Questions" section for more details.

Decide on the order of the questions asked

You should start with easy, general and factual to difficult, particular or abstract questions. Please consider carefully where to place the most sensitive questions. They should be rather placed in the middle or towards the end of the questionnaire. Make sure, however, not to put the most important item last since some people might not complete the interview.

Complete the questionnaire

Add instructions for the interviewers and definitions of keywords for participants. Ensure a smooth flow from one topic to the next one (ex. "and now I will ask you some questions about your own health..."). Insert jumps between questions if some questions are only targeted at a subgroup of the respondents.

Verify the content and style of the questions

Verify that each question answers one of the objectives and that all your objectives are covered by the questions asked. Delete questions that are not directly related to your objectives. Make sure that each question is clear, unambiguous, simple and short. Check the logical order and flow of the questions. Make sure the questionnaire is easy to read and has a clear layout. Please see the Hints to Design a Good Questionnaire section for more details.

Conduct a pilot study

Before starting the study, you should always conduct a pilot study among the intended population. Please see the Piloting Questionnaires section for more details.

Refine your questionnaire

Depending on the results of the pilot study, you will need to amend the questionnaire before the main survey starts.


FEM PAGE CONTRIBUTORS 2007

Editors
Viviane Bremer
Original Author
Viviane Bremer
Contributors
Lisa Lazareck
Viviane Bremer

Contributors