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Redirected Inbound Call Sampling (RICS) A New Methodology. Presenter: Karol Krotki, RTI Co-Authors: Georgiy Bobashev, RTI Burton Levine, RTI Scott Richards, Reconnect Research Conference on Inference from Non-Probability Samples 16-17 March 2017, Paris, France.
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Redirected Inbound Call Sampling (RICS)A New Methodology Presenter: Karol Krotki, RTI Co-Authors: Georgiy Bobashev, RTI Burton Levine, RTI Scott Richards, Reconnect Research Conference on Inference from Non-Probability Samples 16-17 March 2017, Paris, France
MIDI calls Traditional telephone surveys use outbound calls. Redirected Inbound Call Sampling (RICS) uses inbound calls that fail to connect to the intended phone. M Misdialed I Incomplete D Disconnected number I Inbound
There are billions of MIDI calls In the US there are over 150 billion calls a month. 5 billion are MIDI calls. Reconnect Research (RR) connects MIDI calls to surveys. • MIDI calls come from • Misdials to a bank of toll free numbers owned by RR • Routed from telecom companies • AT&T • Verizon
RICS Advantages Advantages • Low cost (20 question study costs $4 per R, no screening) • Speed: 1,000 completed surveys in two hours • Large sample size • Can target billing ZIP Code • Single stage design • Consistency across time • Lower level of respondent burden • Respondent initiates the process
RICS Challenges Disadvantages • Nonprobability sample • Limitations of IVR • Survey has to be short (max. 15 mins.) • Programming issues • IRB issues
Validating RICS—first steps How does one validate a non-probability sample? Does the selection mechanism result in Coverage error/bias? Selection error/bias? Field an RICS and investigate the discrepancy between the demographic distribution of the respondents and census estimates, the weighted outcomes and a national probability study. Nonresponse error complicates our ability to quantify selection error.
Data Collection Results Data collection results by day Distribution of completion time—in minutes
Data Collection Results—continued 52,849 non-duplicated phone numbers were solicited 6,799 eligible respondents. *Eligibility requirement—respondent is 18+
Calibration Unequal weighting effect = 1.14
Health and Media SurveyQuick Assessment of Twitter use and Health • Do you have a Twitter account? • How often do you tweet? • In the past year, have you had flu or flu-like symptoms? • In the year, has anyone else in your household had flu or flu-like symptoms within 2-week period of yours • In the past year, did you get a flu vaccine? • Would you say that in general your health is excellent, very good, good, fair, or poor? • In the past year have you been admitted to an emergency room >2 times? • In the past week, have you smoked 4 or more cigarettes? • How many of your close friends and family are regular tobacco smokers? • How often do you smoke e-cigarettes, vape pens, or hookah pens?
Sequential Comparison • With another RICS survey • With a national outbound telephone survey • With a national household survey • With other sources of data
Results and MessagesReplicability with Another RICS Survey • Response rates: • RICS_BRFSS 14.5% • HMS 6.8%
Comparison with a National Household Survey NSDUH 2014. Weighted Analysis
Rapid Biosurveillance (Flu last year, household transmission, vaccination, networks) • Flu past year (self): 13.9% • Flu Household within 2 week interval: 43.6% • Flu vaccinated last year 44.0% • NotSick (vaccinated vs. not) 83.2 vs. 84.3 • Sick (vaccintated vs. not) 13.5/13.9 • Close friend/family smoking • Smokers vs non-smokers: 55% vs. 37% Flu attack rate from Nature 2015 about 7-30%
Table 1: Sample NHIS and RICS Table 2: Duration of Interview in minutes
Table3: Flow of subjects through the study Data Process Flow
Projects Where RICS May Be Suitable RICS maybe particularly suited for projects with: • Very low budget • Short time lines • To sample special or hard to access populations (e.g. specific zip code, people with asthma) • Situations where outcomes change quickly • Surveillance of influenza • Public opinion • Situations where data are available to measure potential bias
Future Research • Adjust for selection bias, based on: • On average number of calls placed per day • Phone type • Apply a nonresponse adjustment based on ZIP code demographic characteristics. • Incentives: methodology and potential impact • Add, validate and compare MIDI calls from other data sources
Future Research—continued • Mode effect—IVR vs. live interview • Test redirection to other modes: e.g., live phone interview, online • Use RICS to sample rare populations • e.g. boaters, Floridians 18-24 year-old • Use RICS to recruit subjects to • A live telephone interviewer • A web survey
Conclusions • Redirected Inbound Call Sampling (RICS) is a new and promising tool for surveillance and more broad data collection • More statistical analysis is needed to provide rigor and inference from RICS • RTI International and Research Reconnect are partnering to provide scientific basis to RICS
Comments Questions Contact Information Karol Krotki RTI kkrotki@rti.org