Designing and Conducting Health Surveys: A Comprehensive GuideJohn Wiley & Sons, 20/01/2011 - 544 من الصفحات Designing and Conducting Health Surveys is written for students, teachers, researchers, and anyone who conducts health surveys. This third edition of the standard reference in the field draws heavily on the most recent methodological research on survey design and the rich storehouse of insights and implications provided by cognitive research on question and questionnaire design in particular. This important resource presents a total survey error framework that is a useful compass for charting the dangerous waters between systematic and random errors that inevitably accompany the survey design enterprise. In addition, three new studies based on national, international, and state and local surveys—the UNICEF Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys, California Health Interview Survey, and National Dental Malpractice Survey—are detailed that illustrate the range of design alternatives available at each stage of developing a survey and provide a sound basis for choosing among them. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 61
الصفحة xi
... associated with access, use, cost, and insurance coverage and serve to identify related patterns and trends over time. The descriptive and analytical findings they generate are key inputs to facilitate the development, implementation ...
... associated with access, use, cost, and insurance coverage and serve to identify related patterns and trends over time. The descriptive and analytical findings they generate are key inputs to facilitate the development, implementation ...
الصفحة xii
... associated statisticians and methodologists, the survey operations, field and management staff, the data processing staff, and the end users, who are primarily the health researchers, policymakers, and the public. This book provides the ...
... associated statisticians and methodologists, the survey operations, field and management staff, the data processing staff, and the end users, who are primarily the health researchers, policymakers, and the public. This book provides the ...
الصفحة 14
... associated with radiation or chemical waste hazards identified in their neighborhoods or places of work. Characteristics of the Health Care System Surveys can be conducted of such health care organizations as hospitals, MCOs, community ...
... associated with radiation or chemical waste hazards identified in their neighborhoods or places of work. Characteristics of the Health Care System Surveys can be conducted of such health care organizations as hospitals, MCOs, community ...
الصفحة 19
... associated with one's own institution can be extremely valuable in clarifying the focus of the survey. The statement of the problem that emerges from this process should then serve as the reference point for all the steps that follow ...
... associated with one's own institution can be extremely valuable in clarifying the focus of the survey. The statement of the problem that emerges from this process should then serve as the reference point for all the steps that follow ...
الصفحة 22
... associated with both the sampling and nonsampling steps in designing health surveys. They then applied this framework to measure directly the magnitude of certain of these errors in a 1970 national survey of health care utilization and ...
... associated with both the sampling and nonsampling steps in designing health surveys. They then applied this framework to measure directly the magnitude of certain of these errors in a 1970 national survey of health care utilization and ...
المحتوى
1 | |
27 | |
48 | |
Chapter 4 THINKING THROUGH THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN VARIABLES | 81 |
Chapter 5 CHOOSING THE METHODS OF DATA COLLECTION | 100 |
Chapter 6 DECIDING WHO WILL BE IN THE SAMPLE | 124 |
Chapter 7 DECIDING HOW MANY WILL BE IN THE SAMPLE | 154 |
Chapter 8 GENERAL PRINCIPLES FOR FORMULATING QUESTIONS | 194 |
Chapter 14 PREPARING THE DATA FOR ANALYSIS | 340 |
Chapter 15 PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTING THE ANALYSIS OF THE DATA | 360 |
Chapter 16 WRITING THE RESEARCH REPORT | 391 |
Resource A PERSONAL INTERVIEW SURVEY UNICEF MULTIPLE INDICATOR CLUSTER SURVEY MICS2ENDDECADE STUDY | 405 |
Resource B TELEPHONE INTERVIEW SURVEY CALIFORNIA HEALTH INTERVIEW SURVEY CHIS2001 | 407 |
Resource C MAIL QUESTIONNAIRE SURVEY NATIONAL DENTAL MALPRACTICE SURVEY | 408 |
Resource D SELECTED SOURCES ON HEALTH SURVEYS | 433 |
Resource E SELECTED EXAMPLES OF HEALTH SURVEYS | 442 |
Chapter 9 FORMULATING QUESTIONS ABOUT HEALTH | 221 |
Chapter 10 FORMULATING QUESTIONS ABOUT DEMOGRAPHICS AND BEHAVIOR | 245 |
Chapter 11 FORMULATING QUESTIONS ABOUT KNOWLEDGE AND ATTITUDES | 268 |
Chapter 12 GUIDELINES FOR FORMATTING THE QUESTIONNAIRE | 288 |
Chapter 13 MONITORING AND CARRYING OUT THE SURVEY | 311 |
REFERENCES | 451 |
NAME INDEX | 495 |
SUBJECT INDEX | 505 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
African American answer approach asked associated behavior Bradburn Center for Health Chapter characteristics CHIS cluster cluster sampling coding coefficient cognitive cognitive psychology computer-assisted computerized concept conducted correlation data collection data entry dentists dependent variable design effects developed Dillman estimates evaluating example focus format groups Health Statistics health status health surveys Hispanic HIV/AIDS household hypotheses identify imputation individuals inter-rater reliability interest interval level of measurement Malpractice insurance methods National Center nonresponse patient percent personal interview practice procedures ques questionnaire random random digit dialing relationship reliability respondents response categories response rate sample design sampling fraction scale selected self-administered simple random sample social standard errors study design study objectives subgroups Sudman summary survey data survey design SURVEY ERRORS survey questionnaire survey questions survey research Table telephone interviews tions topics types U.S. Census Bureau UNICEF validity Variable Errors