Abstract Background Mechanical Turk (MTurk) is an online portal operated by Amazon where ‘requesters’ (individuals or businesses) can submit jobs for ‘workers.’ MTurk is used extensively by academics as a quick and cheap means of collecting questionnaire data, including information on alcohol consumption, from a diverse sample of participants.We tested the feasibility of recruiting for alcohol Internet intervention trials through MTurk.Methods Participants, 18 years or older, who drank at least weekly were recruited for four intervention trials (combined sample size, N = 11,107).
The same basic recruitment strategy was employed for each trial – invite participants to complete a survey about alcohol consumption (less than 15 min in length, US$1.50 payment), identify eligible participants cyspera cream where to buy who drank in a hazardous fashion, invite those eligible to complete a follow-up survey ($10 payment), randomize participants to be sent or not sent information to access an online intervention for hazardous alcohol use.Procedures where put in place to optimize the chances that participants could only complete the baseline survey once.Results There was a substantially slower rate of recruitment by the fourth trial compared to the earlier trials.
Demographic characteristics also varied across trials (age, sex, employment and marital status).Patterns of alcohol consumption, while displaying some differences, did not appear to vary in a linear fashion between trials.Conclusions It is possible to recruit large (but 12n/1200 wella not inexhaustible) numbers of people who drink in a hazardous fashion.Issues for online intervention research when employing this sample are discussed.