Methods: In order to distinguish yes-sayers' from straight-shooters' in a line of inquiry to determine if subjects had ever heard of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, the key question-of-interest was inserted into a series of 8 have-you-heard-of' questions, naming 4 bogus studies' and 4 real studies'. The individuals who responded yes' to having heard of 2 or more of the bogus questions were identified as yes-sayers, all others were categorized as straight-shooters'. All questions were administered in the Tuskegee Legacy Project (TLP) Questionnaire in a 1999-2000 NIH-funded Random Digit Dial (RDD) survey of 1,133 adults in four U.S. cities.
Results: Overall, for the 1,133 respondents, 31.6% were identified as yes-sayers'. Blacks had the highest rate percentage of yes-sayers' (42.8% vs 35.7% for Hispanics and 24.2% for Whites, p <0.05). Percentage of yes-sayers' differed by income (37.5%, 31.0% and 24.4% for <$0,000, $20-74,999, and >$75,000, p < 0.05) with parallel findings for education levels, but not by sex, age groups, or cities.
Conclusion: These observed significant differences in percentage of yes-sayers' across several key demographic variables suggests the need for further research to determine whether these levels of observed differences in yes-sayers' has a measurable impact on substantive findings as reported from survey research.
This study was supported by NIDCR/NIH grant U54 DE 14257 and T32 DE 007255.