Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Dual Tasks of Interviewers Ting Yan Colm O‘Muircheartaigh Jenny Kelly Pat Cagney Rebecca Jessoe NORC at University of Chicago Kenneth Rasinski University.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Dual Tasks of Interviewers Ting Yan Colm O‘Muircheartaigh Jenny Kelly Pat Cagney Rebecca Jessoe NORC at University of Chicago Kenneth Rasinski University."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Dual Tasks of Interviewers Ting Yan Colm O‘Muircheartaigh Jenny Kelly Pat Cagney Rebecca Jessoe NORC at University of Chicago Kenneth Rasinski University of Chicago Gary Euler Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

2 What do interviewers do? Recruiting potential respondents –Introducing survey to potential respondents –Gaining cooperation –Screening for eligible respondents Administering interviews –Reading questions –Recording answers –Probing –Providing definitions

3 Desired qualities of interviewers When recruiting respondents –Adaptive and flexible (Converse & Schuman, 1974) Tailoring (Groves & McGonagle, 2001; Houtkoop-Steenstra & van den Bergh, 2002; Maynard & Schaeffer, 2002) Maintaining interaction (Groves & McGonagle, 2001) Those who developed their own approach had lower refusal and higher cooperation than those who follow a standard script When administering interviews –Technician like (Converse & Schuman, 1974) Standardized interviewing (Fowler and Magione, 1990) Conflicting?

4 How do interviewers affect survey error? Recruiting respondents –Nonresponse error If interviewer consistently attract respondents with a certain characteristic Administering interviews –Measurement error Interviewer bias Interviewer variance –If interviewers consistently influence responses in a certain way

5 Research questions Is there a relationship between interviewers’ performance at recruiting respondents and administering interviews? –Are interviewers who are good at recruiting respondents also good at collecting data of good quality? How does interviewer experience mediate this relationship, if the relationship exists?

6 Data National Immunization Survey (NIS) –Nationwide, list-assisted random digit-dialing (RDD) survey conducted by the NORC for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention –Monitors the vaccination rates of children between the ages of 19 and 35 months. –2007 Q3 data 712 interviewers worked 499,490 telephone numbers dialed –4,438 interviews obtained

7 Which interviewers were included in the analysis? Interviewers who had completed interview(s) on first contact –295 interviewers 3114 completes

8 Measures of recruitment task (First contact) Refusal rate =# refusals/# first contact cases (First contact) Completion rate =# completes/# first contact cases (First contact) Eligibility rate =# eligibles/# first contact cases Denominator: first contact cases –Virgin (fresh) cases or cases that were dialed by autodialers only. –They haven’t been touched by humans before sent to the current interviewer. Refusal conversion rate =# converted refusals/# refusals

9 Measures of administration task Interviewer effect (ρ int ) Adherence to standardized interviewing (monitoring data) Item nonresponse Interview time (cost)

10 Good openers vs. Bad openers Good openers: 3 out of 4 rates are above medians Good Openers Bad Openers # of interviewers100195 Average # of interviews139 Refusal Rate10.46%13.09% Refusal Conversion Rate1.34%0.32% Completion Rate0.30%0.15% Eligibility Rate3.91%2.37%

11 Good openers vs. Bad Openers (II) When experience is introduced –Median split on # of days worked at NORC Number of Interviewers Average Number of Interviews Completed Good Openers Bad Openers Good Openers Bad Openers Experienced67831511 Inexperienced33112118

12 Good openers vs. Bad Openers (III) When experience is introduced –Median split on # of days worked at NORC Refusal Rate Refusal Conversion Rate Completion Rate Eligibility Rate GoodBadGoodBadGoodBadGoodBad Experienced10.5%12.5%1.7%0.6%0.32%0.16%4.1%2.2% Inexperienced10.5%13.5%0.5%0.1%0.27%0.15%3.6%2.5%

13 ρ int ρ int : Intra-interviewer correlation Deff int =1+ ρ int *(m-1) Hierarchical linear models –Respondent data as level 1 data –Interviewer data as level 2 data –Unconditional model with no explanatory variables at either level –ρ int =between-interviewer variance/total variance

14 ρ int (II) Family Income Good openersBad openers Experienced0.08250.0337 Inexperienced0.23950.1053 0.12360.0786

15 ρ int (III) # of people living in household Good openersBad openers Experienced0.00820.0408 Inexperienced0.00040.0139 0.00130.0239

16 ρ int (IV) # of Vaccines Received (Average) Good openersBad openers Experienced0.0003 Inexperienced0.00410.0026 0.02340.0085

17 Monitoring scores Monitoring items –Read questionnaire verbatim –Probe without biasing or leading/Probing for Don’t Knows –Reads scales as directed etc. Scores –1=Error –2=No Error –3=Outstanding Item-level monitor score for each interviewer Overall summary score for each interviewer

18 Monitoring scores (II) Good openers on average have higher mean scores than bad openers, but difference sig. only for one monitoring item –Read Questionnaire Verbatim –Verifies dates and confirms spelling –Properly obtains all provider information –Use job aids as needed –Reads scales as directed –Records open-end response verbatim –Probes without biasing or leading/Probes Don’t Knows

19 Summary scores across monitoring items

20 Item Nonresponse A set of 24 questions every one had to answer Item nonresponse rate=# of times R didn’t provide an answer /24

21 Average Interview Duration (cost) Time spent on completing an interview –The longer the interview time, the more costly

22 Provider consent rate (79.8%)(74.9%)

23 Conclusions and Discussion Good-opener interviewers More completes Higher refusal conversion, completion, and eligibility rates Lower refusal rate Good-opener interviewers Higher intra-interviewer correlation But more adherence to standardized interviews (higher monitoring scores) More missing data Are good openers also good at collecting data of good quality? No one clear answer Depends on which measures of interviewing tasks Experience didn’t matter much

24 Limitations and Next Steps Only used various rates to measure interviewers’ performance at the recruitment stage Demographic compositions by interviewer status Nonresponse error by interviewer status Only used proxy measures of data quality Direct measures of measurement bias Interviewer characteristics and respondent characteristics not considered Bringing in interviewer and respondents characteristics into the picture Examining the effect of matched interviewer and respondents characteristics

25 Thank You! Yan-ting@norc.org

26


Download ppt "The Dual Tasks of Interviewers Ting Yan Colm O‘Muircheartaigh Jenny Kelly Pat Cagney Rebecca Jessoe NORC at University of Chicago Kenneth Rasinski University."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google