SUPPORTING STATEMENT FOR SURVEY OF VETERAN ENROLLEES’ HEALTH AND
USE OF HEALTH CARE
VA FORM 10-21034g
OMB CONTROL NUMBER 2900-0609
STATISTICAL METHODS
The 2020 Survey Methodology report survey is included to provide a complete overview of statistical methods used in the Survey of Enrollees. Below is an overview of key statistical methods.
B-1: Respondent Universe and Respondent Selection Method
The Survey of Enrollee Universe is the population of Veterans enrolled in the VA health care system as of the end of the fiscal year preceding the survey administration. Enrollee records without a valid address or that are missing one of the stratification variables are not included. In addition, Veterans living outside the U.S. or Puerto Rico are also excluded from the sample. In 2020, the sampling frame included 8,725,547 records from which 134,176 enrolled Veterans were randomly selected to receive an invitation to participate.
B-2: Stratification Procedure
Traditionally, stratification variables have included VISNs (Veterans Integrated Service Network), whether the Veteran was grandfathered into the system during the 1999 enrollment reform (pre-enrollee) or enrolled after the reform (post-enrollee), and Veteran’s enrollment priority group collapsed into three bands of Priority 1-3, Priority 4-6, and Priority 7-8. In 2015, VHA began stratifying the sample by each of the health care systems 96 markets in order to provide more locally relevant detail for health care planning.
The current stratification targets are to guarantee an effective sample size of at least 350 completed interviews in each market (96), 597 completed interviews for each of the three priority groupings in each of the 18 VISNs, and a minimum of 20 percent of all completed interviews representing pre-enrollees (those using the VA health care system before 1999 enrollment reform). In total, this represents 576 strata. Note: Pre-enrollees tend to have more co-morbidities and are therefore more expensive to treat. For this reason, the Enrollee Health Care Projection Model actuary historically requested oversampling of this population. However, as pre-enrollees represent a smaller portion of the total enrollee population, the survey methodology will begin to phase this oversampling out by five percentage points each year.
For
a sample size of approximately 42,000, we expect survey estimates
based on the total sample to have error margins of approximately
+/-0.5 percentage points at the 95 percent confidence level.
For each priority level combining pre and post enrollees within VISN,
or each market combining pre and post enrollees within market, with a
sample size of approximately 350, we expect survey estimates to have
error margins in the range of approximately +/-5 percentage points at
the 95 percent confidence level. Confidence interval projections are
based on measuring a population percentage equal to 50 percent.
These projections do not account for sample design effects, which may
increase the actual error margins for the survey estimates. VA will
provide the contractor a list of enrollees from which to draw.
B-3 & B-4: Response Rate Maximization and Statistical Analysis
Methodological experiments early in the development of the survey taught key lessons about improving both response rates and reducing bias. The current survey methodology adheres to that developed between 2012 and 2015. Key changes included:
A propensity score weighting adjustment to correct for differential non-response by health utilization and demographic information
The introduction of a multi-mode survey instrument to increase response and cooperation rates and reduce response bias by providing expanded access to the survey.
An in-depth discussion of sample development, stratification and weighting can be found in the 2020 Methodology report.
B-5: Consultants on statistical design
Laura Bowman, Survey Project Manager/Program Analyst, Strategic Analysis Service (Tel. 202-615-3309)
Office of Strategic Planning and Analysis
VHA Chief Strategy Office (formerly VHA Office of Policy and Planning)
Department of Veterans Affairs
810 Vermont Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20420
Milliman Inc. (Contractor)
Ed Jhu, Principal and Consulting Actuary, (Tel. 206-504-5828)
Rob Bachelor, Consulting Actuary, Contractor (Tel. 206-504-XXXX)
Contractor:
Advance Survey Design
1193 10th Street, Suite A
Monterey, CA 93940
Mike Larson, PhD
Lead Statistician
Professor, Department of Statistics, George Washington University
Professor, Department of Mathematics, St. Michael’s College (Vermont)
Previous Advisors/Contractors
Westat (Contractor)
1600 Research Boulevard
Rockville, MD 20850
Cathy Tomczak (retired)
Lead Statistician
VHA Office of the Assistant Deputy Under Secretary for Health for Policy and Planning,
Department of Veterans Affairs
810 Vermont Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20420
Jim Schaefer (Currently, Director of Surveys, Office of Performance Measures)
VHA Office of the Assistant Deputy Under Secretary for Health for Policy and Planning,
Department of Veterans Affairs
810 Vermont Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20420
Mike Schwaber, Program Analyst, Strategic Analysis Service (Tel. 202-461-7108)
Office of Strategic Planning and Analysis
VHA Office of the Assistant Deputy Under Secretary for Health for Policy and Planning,
Department of Veterans Affairs
810 Vermont Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20420
IDF (Contractor)
126 College Street
Burlington Vermont 05401
Burlington, VT, Contractor for the survey
Vicki A. Freedman, Ph.D.
Research Professor
Institute for Social Research
University of Michigan
426 Thompson Street
Ann Arbor, MI 48106
Judith Kasper, Ph.D.
Professor
The Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health
Rm 641, 624 N. Broadway
Baltimore MD 21205
Page
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Linda Bergofsky |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-12-17 |