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National Health Interview Survey (NHIS)

National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). “The principal source of information on the health of the U.S. population”. Overview. Initiated in 1957 by the National Center for Health Statistics NHIS data are collected through personal household interviews Purpose: provide data to track

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National Health Interview Survey (NHIS)

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  1. National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) “The principal source of information on the health of the U.S. population”

  2. Overview • Initiated in 1957 by the National Center for Health Statistics • NHIS data are collected through personal household interviews • Purpose: provide data to track • Health status • Health care access • Progress towards achieving national health objectives

  3. Survey sample • Large-scale household interview survey of a statistically representative sample of U.S. civilian, non-institutionalized population • Interviewers visit 35,000-40,000 households across the country and collect data on 75,000 to 100,000 individuals

  4. Sample Design • Multistage area probability design • State-level stratification to allow use of the NHIS for producing state estimates (for larger states only) • State identifiers not released  Research Data Centers • Oversampling of black, Hispanic, and Asian populations • Sample adult selection process has been revised so that when black, Hispanic, or Asian persons age ≥ 65 years are present, they have an increased chance of being selected as the sample adult.

  5. NHIS Basic Module, or Core Sample Child Core Family Core • RANDOM SELECTION: • One sample child (< 18) • One sample adult Collects information on everyone in the family Sample Adult Core • Household composition • Sociodemographic characteristics • Basic indicators of health status • Activity limitations • Injuries • Health insurance coverage • Access to and use of health care servives

  6. Data collection procedures • For the Family Core: • All members of the household age ≥ 18 years and who are at home at the time of the interview are invited to participate and to respond for themselves. • For children and those adults not at home during the interview, information is provided by a knowledgeable adult family member age ≥ 18 years residing in the household.

  7. Data collection procedures, cont’d • For the Sample Child questionnaire: • Obtained from a knowledgeable adult residing in the household. • For the Sample Adult questionnaire: • One adult per family is randomly selected • This individual responds for him/herself to the questions in that section • Unless s/he is physically or mentally unable to do so  knowledgeable PROXY is allowed to answer for the sample adult (~350 cases per year)

  8. Response rates • Response rates: • For the Family Component: 78.7% • Conditional (number of completed interviews divided by the number of eligible sample children/adults) • For the Sample Child Component: 89.8% • For the Sample Adult Component: 77.3% • FINAL RESPONSE RATE: 60.8%

  9. Weighting information • The sample is chosen in such a way that each person in the covered population has a known non-zero probability of selection. • These probabilities of selection, along with various adjustments (e.g., for non-response), are reflected in the sample weights that are provided in the data files.

  10. Survey content • A core set of questions that remain almost unchanged from year to year • Supplemental questions that change from year to year that collect additional data on about current issues of national importance. • Examples of supplements include: cancer screening, family history of cancer diet and nutrition, physical activity, tobacco use, sun protection. • Nearly 20 minutes of an average NHIS interview is devoted to supplemental questions.

  11. What are NHIS data used for • Identify health problems • Determine barriers to accessing care • Evaluate health problems • Study health-related disparities • Monitor progress toward national health objectives • Monitor progress toward national well-being indicators.

  12. The Health and Retirement Study (HRS)

  13. Overview • The HRS is the largest ongoing prospective longitudinal study of older persons’ health in the U.S. • Beginning in 1992, a nationally representative sample of more than 30,000 persons over 50 years of age and their spouses has been interviewed every two years through 2008.

  14. Overview, cont’d • At each interview, self- or proxy-reported data are collected on a number of domains. • The HRS employs a complex multistage area probability sampling design, with oversampling of households with a Black or Hispanic head.

  15. Introduction » Data Collection Path Source: http://hrsonline.isr.umich.edu/sitedocs/surveydesign.pdf

  16. Contents • Demographics, income, education • Self-reported comorbid conditions • Heart disease • Lung disease • Hypertension • Cancer • Diabetes • Arthritis • Stroke • Psychiatric Conditions

  17. Contents, cont’d • Self-reported health status and decline • Functional status • Cognitive status • Depressive symptoms • A number of conditions that can be grouped under the rubric of geriatric syndromes • Urinary incontinence, fall, visual/hearing impairment

  18. Contents, cont’d • Height and weight  BMI • Smoking • Alcohol consumption • Physical activity • Perceived life expectancy

  19. Contents, cont’d • Hospitalizations • Nursing home admission • Use of preventive services (cancer screening)

  20. The RAND files • Streamlined, processed files that combines data from all the waves to create a unique record for each respondent and their spouse • More user-friendly than the raw HRS files • However, not all the data elements are available in the RAND files.

  21. Use of HRS data • Numerous ways by which to characterize the older U.S. population • Multimorbidity in relation to: • Socio-demographics • Health status, decline, mortality • Use of preventive services • Frailty, using various definitions (Cigolle et al.) • Health status/decline by cancer survivor status • …..

  22. Important analytic considerations • Weighted data • Consider representativeness of the study cohort (people who have agreed to participate in the study every 2 years) • Mortal vs. non-mortal attrition

  23. ?

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