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Mixed-mode data collection Recent developments at Statistics Netherlands

Explore recent advancements in data collection at Statistics Netherlands, focusing on quality and costs, redesigns, mode effects, and implications for statistical surveys. Discover how web and mixed-mode designs impact response rates, questionnaire lengths, comparability, undercoverage, and mode effects.

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Mixed-mode data collection Recent developments at Statistics Netherlands

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  1. Mixed-mode data collectionRecent developments at Statistics Netherlands Gabriël van Dam

  2. Outline • Background and motivation • Quality and costs • Redesigns • Mode effects • Conclusions and discussion Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

  3. Background Quality & costs Redesigns Mode effects Discussion Developments at Stat Netherlands Generally, focus on costs: Project Redesign of Social Surveys. 2007 – 2012 Focus on quality: Project Mode Effects in Social Surveys, 2010 – 2012 Adaptive survey designs: Studies for CVS and LFS, 2011 - 2013 Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

  4. Background Quality & costs Redesigns Mode effects Discussion Focus on costs At Statistics Netherlands, five main questions: • What are response rates for web and Mixed-mode designs? • Can we do Mixed-mode designs with web? • What should be lengths of questionnaires and how to transform complex survey items? • Are new statistics comparable and stable? • What about undercoverage of web? Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

  5. Background Quality & costs Redesigns Mode effects Discussion Redesign of Social Surveys Conclusions to main redesign questions Response rates: • Web cannot be single mode • MM designs have response rates and representativeness similar to CAPI • Web recruitment rates lower than CATI/CAPI Implementation: • Major changes to administration systems • Complex monitoring of sample cases • Data collection period was lengthened Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

  6. Background Quality & costs Redesigns Mode effects Discussion Redesign of Social Surveys Questionnaires: • Questionnaires had to be bisected • Complex items simplified or replaced by registries Comparability and stability: • Parallel runs conducted for all redesigns • Quality reports before and after redesigns in order to support explanation of method effects • Web shows unstable response rates • Large mode effects are possible Coverage web: • Web access rate at home is 90% • Undercoverage based on age, income, ethnicity and urbanization degree Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

  7. Background Quality & costs Redesigns Mode effects Discussion Context – LFS and CVS redesigns LFS LFS LFS <2010 2010 – 2012 >2012 web CAPI CATI CAPI CATI CAPI CVS (SN and public) CVS <2011 >2012 web+ web+ web + paper CATI CAPI CATI Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

  8. Background Quality & costs Redesigns Mode effects Discussion Mode effect components Data collection steps: Persons need to be reached (coverage) Persons need to respond (response) Persons need to provide valid answers (measurement) Total relative mode effect (telephone – face-to-face): Mtel(y) = ytel,tel,tel – ytot,f2f,f2f coverage response measurement Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

  9. Background Quality & costs Redesigns Mode effects Discussion Mode effects - conclusions CVS: • Telephone most optimistic and web most pessimistic • Measurement effect is dominant effect • Mode effect very strong on victimization topics • Questionnaire needs redesign LFS: • Mode effect is mix of effects • Selection effect can be explained using register variables General: • Mode-specific measurement effects will lead to method effects in redesigns Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

  10. Background Quality & costs Redesigns Mode effects Discussion Mode effects - implications CVS: • Weighting only removes a small part of the mode effect • Mode effects must be avoided by design and/or must be stabilized by calibration to fixed mode totals LFS: • Weighting removes a large part of the mode effect • Remaining mode effect is difference in measurement Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

  11. Background Quality & costs Redesigns Mode effects Discussion Conclusions • Web cannot be used as a single mode for social surveys and lead to MM designs • MM surveys including web are feasible after some learning period but require investments in infrastructure, monitoring and pilot studies • Inclusion of web as a survey mode implies a redesign of survey questionnaires • Mode effects between web and interviewer modes can be large Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

  12. Background Quality & costs Redesigns Mode effects Discussion Recommendations Reduce, avoid and adjust: • Reduce measurement effects by careful questionnaire design • Avoid contrasting modes and assign resources to subpopulations that show strongest mode effects • Adjust for method effects by stabilizing or calibrating the distribution of respondents over modes Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

  13. Background Quality & costs Redesigns Mode effects Discussion Discussion • Web response rates are still much lower than other modes. Increase of rates should be possible? • How to deal with household data collection in web surveys (in terms of self and proxy reporting)? • How to increase web recruitment rates for subsequent waves? • How to stabilize statistics in MM surveys including web? Questions? Email: gdam@cbs.nl Seminar on Statistical Data Collection – September 26, 2013

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