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Responsive Design on the National Health Interview Survey: Opportunities and Challenges

Responsive Design on the National Health Interview Survey: Opportunities and Challenges. Renee M. Gindi NCHS. Federal Conference on Statistical Methodology Statistical Policy Seminar December 4, 2012. Division of Health Interview Statistics. National Center for Health Statistics.

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Responsive Design on the National Health Interview Survey: Opportunities and Challenges

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  1. Responsive Design on the National Health Interview Survey: Opportunities and Challenges Renee M. Gindi NCHS Federal Conference on Statistical Methodology Statistical Policy Seminar December 4, 2012 Division of Health Interview Statistics National Center for Health Statistics

  2. Objectives • National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) background • Potential features of responsive design on NHIS • Opportunities • Challenges

  3. Conducted by National Center for Health Statistics Nationally representative Representative monthly sample In-person interviews 35-40,000 household interviews/year Fielded by U.S. Census Bureau ~700 interviewers in 6 regional offices The National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) • 1 hour face-to-face interview – no incentives

  4. Refusal Rates, NHIS 1969-2011

  5. Sources of Paradata on NHIS • Contact History Instrument (CHI) • Used on other surveys fielded by Census • Front/Back sections of the survey instrument • Tailored to NHIS • Blaiseaudit trails • Used to produce item/interview times

  6. Recent Paradata Research from NHIS • Using Statistical Process Control to monitor data quality estimates (item nonresponse, item time) over time • Using CHI variables to estimate response propensity • response propensity and measurement error • response propensity and survey outcomes

  7. Looking Ahead: Responsive Design on NHIS • Some elements of responsive design • Monitoring performance indicators • Change design based on monitoring survey outcomes • Target interventions to subsets using response propensity • Timeline: 2016 sample redesign

  8. Looking Ahead: Responsive Design on NHIS • Opportunities • Real-time access to operations data • New ways to estimate survey quality • Challenges • Selecting and prioritizing survey outcome estimates • How, when, and where data collection phases should shift

  9. Real-Time Access to Operations Data • Census Bureau’s Unified Tracking System (UTS) • More information to make better decisions quickly • Daily data update and historical data • Flexibility in reports • NHIS-specific indicators on tracked on UTS • Demographic • Race • Income • Education • Employment • Health • Usual place of care • Needs help with personal care Response quality • First /Last Name • Consent for linkage • Adult SSN • Telephone number

  10. New Ways to Estimate Survey Quality • Trying to identify measures that can help assess, reduce, and correct for nonresponse bias in our health estimates • Adding new interviewer observation questions on responders and non-responders • Physical condition of the sample unit • Household income, employment status • Health-related indicators

  11. Identifying priority estimates: 15 Selected Health Measures • Lack of health insurance coverage and type of coverage • Usual place to go for medical care • Obtaining needed medical care • Receipt of influenza vaccination • Receipt of pneumococcal vaccination • Obesity • Leisure-time physical activity • Current smoking • Alcohol consumption • Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing • General health status • Personal care needs • Serious psychological distress • Diagnosed diabetes • Asthma episodes and current asthma

  12. “Phase Shifts”: How, When, and Where? • How can we “sufficiently alter” NHIS protocol? • Mode shift? Shift to “core” survey? Introduce incentives? • When should protocol be altered given a monthly sample and production cycle? • Is a 7-10 day window wide enough to achieve response goals? • Where should protocol be altered? • Nationally? Regional Office? State?

  13. Renee M. Gindi, Ph.D. Email: iuz2@cdc.gov Phone: 301-458-4502 Thank you!

  14. EXTRA SLIDES

  15. SPC: Sample Adult Interview Pace (seconds per question) Control Chart, Regional Office 1, Cluster 4

  16. Response Propensity and Measurement Bias

  17. Correlations between CHI Measures and Participation and Health Outcomes : NHIS, 2010 < .30: Weak/very weak .30 - .69: Moderate >= .70: Strong/very strong

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