1 / 12

Evaluating Filter Questions Used for the Participation & Activity Limitation Survey

Evaluating Filter Questions Used for the Participation & Activity Limitation Survey. David Lawrence Questionnaire Design Resource Centre Statistics Canada QUEST 2007. Overview. PALS background Rationale for study Population of interest Findings & Observations What now. PALS Background.

jeri
Download Presentation

Evaluating Filter Questions Used for the Participation & Activity Limitation Survey

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evaluating Filter Questions Used for the Participation & Activity Limitation Survey David Lawrence Questionnaire Design Resource Centre Statistics Canada QUEST 2007

  2. Overview • PALS background • Rationale for study • Population of interest • Findings & Observations • What now

  3. PALS Background • National post-censal survey • Target: Canadian adults & children whose everyday activities may be limited due to a health-related condition or problem • Conducted 4 times: 1986, 1991, 2001 & 2006 • Census filter questions used to create a sampling frame.

  4. Rationale for Study • On-going initiative to improve efficiencies in the collection of social statistical data • Review of many social concepts towards harmonizing various questions included on social surveys. • Activity limitation questions are a part of this review. • Evaluate the performance of the filter questions

  5. Population of Interest Two specific areas of interest: • ‘False positive’ respondents • Respondents having ‘soft’ conditions.

  6. Methodology • 57 cognitive interviews with PALS respondents • Interviews conducted at focus group facilities • Four test sites • Participants: - False positive adults - False positive children - Adult respondents having a ‘soft’ condition - Child respondents having a ‘soft’ condition

  7. Specific Objectives Explore: • comprehension of filter questions - question intent - meaning of terms • reporting issues related to “soft” conditions • potential structural problems with questions

  8. Census Filter Question Do you have any difficulty hearing, seeing, communicating, walking, climbing stairs, bending, learning or doing any similar activities? О Yes, sometimes О Yes, often О No

  9. Canadian Community Health Survey The next few questions deal with any current limitations in your daily activities caused by a long-term health condition or problem. In these questions a long-term condition refers to a condition that is expected to last or has already lasted 6 months or more. Do you have any difficulty hearing, seeing, communicating, walking, climbing stairs, bending, learning or doing any similar activities? О Yes, sometimes О Yes, often О No

  10. Activity Reduction Questions Does a physical condition or mental condition or health problem reduce the amount or kind of activity you can do: ... at home? … at work or school? … in other activities for example, transportation or leisure? Yes, sometimes Yes, often No

  11. Findings & Observations • Question context • Question location • Terminology • Mode • Proxy vs. non-proxy response

  12. What Now? • ‘No’ sample (False negatives) … May 2007 • Further evaluation … quantitative study? • Address issues pertaining to harmonization …

More Related