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A Tale of Two Methods: Comparing mail and RDD data collection for the Minnesota Adult Tobacco Survey III. Wendy Hicks and David Cantor Westat Ann St. Claire, ClearWay Minnesota sm Rebecca Fee, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota Peter Rhode, Minnesota Department of Health.
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A Tale of Two Methods: Comparing mail and RDD data collection for the Minnesota Adult Tobacco Survey III Wendy Hicks and David Cantor Westat Ann St. Claire, ClearWay Minnesotasm Rebecca Fee, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota Peter Rhode, Minnesota Department of Health
Overview of Presentation • Report results of a feasibility study comparing mail and telephone data collection methods • Seeming declines in RDD response rates (Curtin et al, 2005) • Changes in coverage of the telephone population (Blumberg et al, 2006, 2007) • Increasing costs associated with RDD surveys • Findings mostly replicate those reported by Link et al. (2006) • Some suggestion that an “all adult” selection method in a mail survey results in biased estimates for young adults (18-24 year olds)
Methodological Approach • Mail survey has small sample and large confidence intervals • Contrast results found in a parallel mail vs. telephone study for which mail study selected individuals rather than addresses • Bring in similar findings from another pilot study (Health Information National Trends Survey, HINTS)
MATS Overview • Minnesota Adult Tobacco Survey (MATS) • ClearWay Minnesotasm • Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota • Minnesota Department of Health • Major objective of MATS: collect a diverse set of public health data about adult pop in MN, focusing on tobacco and cigarette use • MATS samples from two frames • RDD • Blue Cross member list frame
USPS Mail Data Collection • All adult respondent selection mechanism • Mailing package included 4 identical questionnaires and return envelopes “Each adult living at this address should complete one of the enclosed questionnaires. Please give one of the enclosed questionnaires and an envelope to each person 18 years old or older living at this address.” • Some differences from the CATI instrument to make it more suitable to paper, self-administration
Nonresponse and coverage error by mode • 9.3% weighted estimate of cell-phone only households in the USPS survey • Generally, the demographic distributions for mail and telephone respondents parallel one another • Overall, more missing data in mail than telephone • USPS vs. RDD-only respondents (differences of 3% plus) • USPS has fewer HS grads, larger underestimate relative to CPS • USPS has fewer 65+, smaller overestimate relative to CPS • USPS has fewer 1-adult households and more 4+ adult households, closer distribution to CPS
Nonresponse and coverage error by mode • Similar story for the BC member list, generally the distributions for mail and telephone parallel • BC-M had fewer “high school grads” and “some college” • BC-M had more “married” than phone respondents
Comparing survey estimates by mode • Socially sensitive items (risk behaviors) • Smoking prevalence, • Binge drinking • Factual items • Exposure to media messages regarding tobacco use • Workplace smoking policies • Items assessing beliefs • Harm in smoking an occasional cigarette • Smoking increases comfort in social situations
Estimates of risk behaviors Hypothesis: mail > reporting of risk behaviors
Percent current smokers, by age, mode: General pop * * *p >0.03
More suggestive evidence . . . • Health Information National Trend Survey (HINTS) • Small pilot • USPS frame • National sample • “all adults” selection method • Replicated the smoking result: Estimates for 18-24 year old mail respondents significantly lower
What about other types of items? • Factual items • Reported exposure to media messages • Work place policy regarding smoking • No differences by mode, for either frame • No differences by mode for 18-24 years old • Items assessing beliefs and attitudes • Some support for age effect for one of the two items…
Summary and Discussion • Response rate roughly comparable • Mail mode includes coverage of cell-only population • Demographic comparison by mode- • USPS (all adult) to RDD (next birthday) – very similar distributions, some differences in educ, adults in HH, • Member list – also very similar, differences as anticipated • Some suggestion that 18-24 year olds not representative for USPS “all adult” method • Lower reports of risk behaviors in mail mode
Household type for 18-24 year olds, by mode • In USPS sample • Almost 80% live in family-type households • About 6% live alone • About 3% live in un-related households • Only 13% of 18-24 year olds were cell-only households In the RDD sample, • Almost 65% live in family-type households • About 4% live alone • Almost 25% live in un-related households
Next steps • Incorporate methods to broaden “type” of young adult respondents • Advance letter • Incentive • Fed-ex the second package • Explore other respondent selection mechanism • Next birthday method • Other methods