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pdfNSFG
OMB Attachment F
OMB No. 0920-0314
National Center for Health Statistics
National Survey of Family Growth Update: Resuming
Data Collection with a New Multi-mode Design
Anjani Chandra, Ph.D.
NSFG Team Lead & Principal Investigator
NCHS Board of Scientific Counselors Meeting
February 10, 2022
NSFG Team
At NCHS:
NSFG Team within Division of Vital Statistics/Reproductive Statistics Branch:
Anjani Chandra, Team Lead/Principal Investigator
Joyce Abma, Contract Officer’s Representative
Gladys Martinez
Kim Daniels
Colleen Nugent
Jennifer Sayers
Hee-Choon Shin, Mathematical Statistician, Division of Research & Methodology
At RTI:
Andy Peytchev, Principal Investigator
Susan Kinsey, Project Director
Emilia Peytcheva, Instrumentation and Methodology Reports Task Leader
Taylor Lewis, Sample Design, Weighting, and Imputation Task Leader
Lilia Filippenko, Systems Development, Data Processing, Documentation, and Delivery Task Leader
William Savage, Information Security and Confidentiality Task Leader
Milton Cahoon, Preparation for Data Collection and Data Collection Task Leader
Overview of presentation
NSFG background
Progress since last BSC presentation in January 2020
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Closeout of previous contract and final data release (2017-2019 NSFG)
Award of new contract September 2020 and preparation for data collection launch
Instrument development work – including adaptations for online mode
Multi-mode survey design envisioned for Year 1 data collection
Resumption of data collection in January 2022
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Revisions made for Year 1, Quarter 1 due to COVID-19
Plans under review/consideration for Quarter 2+
Feedback and discussion
NSFG Background
NSFG Purpose and Uses
Address Section 306 of the Public Health Service Act, stipulating “NCHS
shall collect statistics on… family formation, growth, and dissolution”
Help explain variations in birth rates using intermediate or “proximate”
determinants of fertility
Assess factors that affect timing and consequences of sexual activity and
pregnancy
Describe relationships and families
Measure receipt of family planning and other medical services
Monitor risk of HIV and STIs in general household population
NSFG Background (1973-2019)
Each survey provides a nationally representative, cross-sectional snapshot
of the U.S. household “reproductive-age” population
Key changes since “Cycle 1” in 1973:
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1982 – Inclusion of never-married women
1988 & 1995 - linked to NHIS sampling frame from several years prior
1995 – Conversion to CAPI and ACASI and 1st use of incentives
2002 – Inclusion of men (independent sample) & expansion of ACASI
2006 – Transition to continuous fieldwork design
2015 – Expansion of age range from 15-44 to 15-49
Public-use files have been released with every periodic survey 1973-2002
(Cycles 1-6) and roughly every 2 years since 2006 (under continuous
fieldwork design)
Year
Scope
N
Over Samples
Response Rates
Incentive
OMB Approved
Intvw Length
1973
Ever-Married Women
15-44
9,797
Black women
90.2%
None
60 min
1976
Ever-Married Women
15-44
8,611
Black women
82.7%
None
60 min
1982
All Women 15-44
7,969
Black women & teens 15-19
79.4%
None
60 min
1988
All Women 15-44
8,450
Black women
82.5%
None
70 min
1995
All Women 15-44
10,847
Black & Hispanic women
78.7%
$20
100 min
2002
All Women & Men
12,571
W = 7,643
M = 4,928
Black people, Hispanic people,
People 15-19
All - 79%
W – 80%
M – 78%
$40
W – 85 min
M – 60 min
2006-2010
All Women & Men 1544
22,682
W=12,279
M=10,403
Black people, Hispanic people,
People 15-19
All - 77%
W – 78%
M – 75%
$40
W – 85 min
M – 60 min
2011-2013
All Women & Men 1544
10,416
W=5,601
M=5,815
Black people, Hispanic people,
People 15-19
All – 72.8%
W – 73.4%
M – 72.1%
$40
2013-2015
All Women & Men 1544
10,205
W=5,699
M=4,506
Black people, Hispanic people,
People 15-19
All – 69.3%
W – 71.2%
M – 67.1%
$40
2015-2017
10,094
All Women & Men now
W=5,554
15-49
M=4,540
Black people, Hispanic people,
People 15-19
All – 65.3%
W – 66.7%
M – 63.6%
$40
W – 80 min
M – 60 min
2017-2019
All Women & Men 1549
11,347
W=6,141
M=5,206
Black people, Hispanic people,
People 15-19
All – 63.4%
W – 65.2%
M – 61.4%
$40
W – 80 min
M – 60 min
W – 80 min
M – 60 min
W – 80 min
M – 60 min
Current NSFG Cosponsors (all within DHHS)
National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS)
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
Office of Population Affairs (OPA)
Administration for Children & Families (ACF)/ Children’s Bureau
Administration for Children & Families (ACF)/ Office of Planning, Research, & Evaluation (OPRE)
Office on Women’s Health
CDC/NCHHSTP/Division of HIV Prevention
CDC/NCHHSTP/Division of STD Prevention
CDC/NCHHSTP/Division of Adolescent & School Health
CDC/NCCDPHP/Division of Reproductive Health
CDC/NCCDPHP/Division of Cancer Prevention & Control
CDC/NCIPC/Division of Violence Prevention
Progress since last BSC update
in January 2020
Closeout of previous contract and final data release
(2017-2019 NSFG)
Previous 10-year contract with University of Michigan ended Dec 2020
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Final public-use files for 2017-2019 NSFG released in October 2020
Restricted-use files made available through Research Data Center (RDC):
• Contextual, interviewer observations, and paradata files
• Additional data, formerly included on PUF, but now only available in RDC due to disclosure risk
Analyses with latest NSFG data:
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Data Brief on current contraceptive status released with 2017-2019 PUF in October 2020
NSFG Key Statistics page updated with 2017-2019 data in November 2021
Several QuickStats with 2017-2019 data published in 2021, but most other analyses delayed due to
staff size and competing demands of new contract and 3 staff COVID deployments
• Teen report using data for 2015-2017
• Menarche report using data through 2017
Award of new contract to RTI and preparations for
Year 1 (2022) data collection
New 10-year contract awarded to RTI in September 2020, with plans to
resume data collection with a multi-mode survey design in January 2022
Oversight, review, and collaboration with contractor on:
Sample design and establishing quarterly sample areas
Interviewer training materials and other preparation for multi-mode data collection
Onboarding of contractor staff, hiring interviewers
Establishing IT systems that meet CDC security requirements
Modification of contract to move web survey mode earlier (to 1st year of data
collection) due to COVID
– Obtaining clearances for OMB and ERB
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Instrument development work
Producing programmer-ready full specifications based on “capi-lite” questionnaires in RFP
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Streamlining and restructuring of content to reduce complexity and respondent burden
Improvements to accommodate respondents in same-sex marriages and cohabitations
Incorporation of new items from cosponsors and revisions prompted by CCQDER work***
Adapting survey instruments and interview aids to work for both FTF and online modes
Translating new or revised items into Spanish
Developing web screener to manage multiple survey tasks accomplished in FTF mode
Developing an electronic life history calendar for female survey
Extensive instrument testing in English and Spanish
***Collaboration with CCQDER on selected instrument issues:
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Cognitive interviews to assess Life History Calendar, as well as selected question series
RANDS panel (in progress) to do split-panel testing of specific questions or series
Survey design envisioned for Year 1
Continuing to interview 1 person aged 15-49 per sample household
Building off success of continuous FTF survey design used 2006-2019:
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Responsive survey design using paradata in real time with subsampling for nonresponse allowed for
nonresponse bias mitigation with cost control
Prior FTF design
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Current Multi-mode design
Fieldwork organized into 4 12-week quarters/year •
2-Phase design:
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– Phase 1 (weeks 1-10):
All sample worked
$0 screener, $40 main incentive
– Phase 2 (weeks 11-12):
30% subsample of non-respondents
$5 prepaid screener; $40 prepaid for main,
and $40 at end for main
Fieldwork organized into 4 16-week quarters/year
3-Phase design:
– Phase 1 (weeks 1-4): Web
$2 screener, $40 main incentive
– Phase 2 (weeks 5-12): Web & FTF
No change in incentive
– Phase 3 (weeks 13-16): Web & FTF
Up to 50% subsample of non-respondents
$5 prepaid screener; $40 prepaid for main,
and $40 at end for main
Multi-mode, multi-phase survey design for Year 1:
4 overlapping quarters
Multi-mode Comparison Study (originally planned for
Q1/2, but shifted to Q3/4)
New Multi-mode Design:
Web (CAWI) (Phase 1)
Face to Face (and Web continued) (Phase 2)
Face to Face, increased incentives (Phase 3)
Mail eligibility or NRFU survey (Phase 4)
Face to Face, as used 2006-2019:
Face to Face (Phase 1)
Face to Face, increased incentives (Phase 2)
Resumption of data collection
in January 2022
Quarter 1 changes and challenges
The surge in COVID-19 rates, national staffing shortages, and contractor
policy precluded FTF interviewing in most NSFG sample areas at start of
Q1; policy changed as of 2/3/22 to allow some FTF during Q1.
As a result, for Quarter 1:
– Only CAWI data collection in Phases 1 and 2
– Field staff will conduct Phase 3 interviews with higher incentives, for a subsample of
non-respondents from Phases 1 & 2, as originally planned, and will follow up 100% of
breakoffs.
– Seeking OMB and ERB approval for further changes in Quarter 2
Changes being considered for Quarter 2+ (1 of 2)
Mailed paper screener to augment CAWI screener
– Most nonresponse in HH surveys relying on mailed invitations to a web survey is at
screener stage. Even if FTF interviewing can resume to originally intended levels in Q2,
mailed screeners could reduce reliance on in-person follow-up.
– Paper screener would be mailed around week 2 (on 3rd mailing, approx. 1 week after 1st
mailing)
– Would only be used to select adult respondents, given complexity of parental
permission and minor assent process for teens 15-17
– We would evaluate impact on response rates, demographic composition, & cost
indicators.
Conducting telephone prompting calls to complete the web main survey
Changes being considered for Quarter 2+ (2 of 2)
Experiment to test accelerated delivery of Phase 3’s higher incentives
– Phase 3 protocol already approved by OMB & ERB:
• $5 prepaid incentive for screener; $40 prepaid incentive before main and $40 upon
completion
– Experimental condition would be assigned 50-50 at sample address level – half receiving
higher incentives at standard Phase 3 timing (weeks 13-16) and half receiving up front in
Phase 1.
– Higher incentives have potential to increase response rates and decrease nonresponse
bias
– Incentivizing participation from the beginning could be cost-efficient overall:
• In areas where FTF is not possible, can reduce # of mailings needed per case
• In areas where FTF is possible, can reduce # of sample addresses needing FTF
– Some increased challenge for field staff juggling different incentive protocols
Feedback and Discussion
File Type | application/pdf |
File Title | Microsoft PowerPoint - bsc-pres-Anjani-Chandra-2-10-2022_508compliant |
Author | ayc3 |
File Modified | 2023-03-01 |
File Created | 2023-03-01 |