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Impact of T-ACASI on Estimates of Youth Smoking Prevalence: Results of UMASS Tobacco Study. 1 Center for Survey Research University of Massachusetts Boston. Lois Biener, 1 Charles F. Turner, 2 & Amy L. Nyman 1. 2 Health & Behavior Measurement Program Research Triangle Institute.
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Impact of T-ACASI on Estimates of Youth Smoking Prevalence:Results of UMASS Tobacco Study 1Center for Survey Research University of Massachusetts Boston Lois Biener,1 Charles F. Turner, 2 & Amy L. Nyman1 2Health & Behavior Measurement Program Research Triangle Institute Presented at American Public Health Association Meetings, Phila., Nov. 12, 2002 Funded by The National Cancer Institute’s State & Community Tobacco Control Research Initiative
Introduction A key concern for tobacco researchers is obtaining accurate information on youth smoking behaviors. School-based self-administered surveys under-represent school drop-outs, truants and absentees, and securing cooperation from school systems is difficult. In addition, obtaining parental consent can reduce both the response rate and the representativeness of the sample. Random-digit-dial (RDD) telephone surveys can recruit representative samples, but they yield lower estimates of smoking prevalence than in-school, self-administered surveys. Although some of this discrepancy may arise from over-reporting in school settings, children’s worries about being overheard by parents and reluctance to disclose smoking to adult interviewers is likely to produce under-reporting in telephone surveys. We present results of an experiment in which these factors were reduced.
Methods A representative sample of 3800 youth, aged 12 to 17 were recruited for the UMass Tobacco Study. Two-thirds were randomly assigned to be surveyed about their smoking experiences using standard interviewer-administered questioning (T-IAQ); one-third were assigned to a private computer-administered self-interview (T-ACASI). In T-ACASI respondents listen to pre-recorded questions and enter answers on the keypad of a touchtone telephone. Before speaking with the youth, permission was obtained from a parent or guardian who had, in most cases served as the informant for a household screener which enumerated the household and collected information on the smoking status of all resident adults.
Data Collection Protocol Interviewers introduced the study to all youth respondents, and conducted the first 2 sections of the interview (18 questions) which dealt with details of school attendance, after-school activities, and television viewing patterns. Respondents assigned to T-ACASI were then connected to the computerized portion of the interview and were told that they would be connected back to the interviewer when the computerized portion was completed. After completing the 2 sections on smoking behavior (mean time 7.5 minutes), respondents were automatically returned to the interviewer and completed the remaining 6 sections of the interview.
Research Questions • Is T-ACASI technology acceptable to youth 12 – 17 years of age? • Are youth more likely to report smoking behavior with T-ACASI than with a live interviewer? • Are youth more likely to report susceptibility to smoking with T-CASI?
Results • Response rate was somewhat lower for T-ACASI (60.8%) than T-IAQ (65.8%). • Some proportion of the T-ACASI decrement was due to technological problems and interviewer error.
Ever Smoked Whole Cigarette *p < .05 N=127 N=340 N=419 Age
Lifetime Smoking:Has had at least a puff *p < .05 N=1213 N=1330 N=1277 Age
Past Year Smoking:Smoked at least 1 cigarette in past year *p < .05 N=1213 N=1330 N=1277 Age
Past Month Smoking:Smoked at least 1 cigarette past month *p < .05 N=1213 N=1330 N=1277 Age
Do you think you will try a cigarette soon?Never smokers and “puffers” *p < .05 N=1148 N=1109 N=811
Do you think you will smoke in the next year? *p < .05 N=1211 N=1328 N=1277
Would you smoke if best friend offered a cigarette? N=1211 N=1328 N=1273 *p <= .05
“Do your parents know that you smoke?” p < .05 N=373
Would/Do parents disapprove ‘a lot’ of your smoking? p < .05 N=377 N=3463
Results: Smoking Prevalence Estimates • Estimates of lifetime smoking were 36% higher for the youngest respondents with T-ACASI compared to T-IAQ. • Estimates of past year and past month smoking were 60 to 70% higher for youth 14-15 years old with T-ACASI.
Results: Susceptibility to smoking • Youth 12 to 15 who were least experienced with cigarettes were twice as likely to admit intentions to try a cigarette soon with T-ACASI than T-IAQ. • All youth were slightly less likely to report a strong commitment not to smoke in the future with T-ACASI.
Results: Reports of parental attitudes • Smokers were 50% more likely to report that their parents knew that they smoked and less likely to report parental disapproval when speaking with a live interviewer than when responding to the automated survey.
Conclusions • The traditional telephone interview of Massachusetts youth results in under-reporting of current smoking among 14-15 year olds by about 5 percentage points. • Traditional telephone interviewing appears to under-estimate youth susceptibility to future smoking, especially among those with the lowest levels of experience with cigarettes.
Conclusions (continued) • The use of T-ACASI methodology does not remove the discrepancy in smoking prevalence estimates between self-administered, school-based surveys and home-based telephone surveys of adolescents.
Additional research can help to explore the proportion of the remaining discrepancy which is due to over-reporting in self-administered surveys and that due to under-reporting in telephone interviews.