Title: Understanding Society
1UnderstandingSociety
THE UK HOUSEHOLD LONGITUDINAL STUDY
2Funding and Sustainability
- Study currently funded until 2015, waves 1-5
- ESRC contribution of 27 million
- 19.4 million from Large Facilities Capital Fund
- 2.51 million from co-funders, including
-
3Impact
- Understanding Society will explain how UK
families respond to regional, national and
international change, including - Environment we will track whether people are
changing their environmental behaviour in areas
like recycling - Recession and Mobility are large numbers of
people moving to new industries? - Caring for the elderly are people leaving
employment to care? - Are people struggling to get stable employment
following the deepest recession in sixty years? - What are the financial behaviours of UK
households?
4Understanding SocietyThe basics
5Understanding Society The beginning
- Built on the strong foundation of the British
Household Panel Survey (BHPS) and the Northern
Ireland Household Panel Study - 18 years (BHPS) / 8 years (NIHPS) of data
- Most used data by academics
- More than 2000 publications
- Funded by the Economic and Social Research
Council (ESRC) and drawing on co-funding from
Government Departments - Management of the study awarded to ISER
- Fieldwork contract awarded to
- National Centre for Social Research (NatCen) for
GB - Central Survey Unit (CSU) for Northern Ireland
6Understanding Society The basics
- UKHLS UK Household Longitudinal Study
- UK covers England, Wales, Scotland and Northern
Ireland - Household interview all adults in the
household, and children aged 10-15 complete a
questionnaire - Longitudinal return each year to interview the
same people, following them if they move and
interviewing their household
7Rationales for longitudinal research
- Net versus gross change gross change visible
only from longitudinal data - e.g. decomposition of change in unemployment rate
over time into contributions from inflows and
outflows - Some phenomena are inherently longitudinal (e.g.
poverty persistence unstable employment) - Provides spell-based perspectives (and can
observe how circumstances change with time spent
in state) - Repeated observations on individuals allow for
possibility of controlling for unobserved
differences between individuals (fixed and random
effect models) - The ability to make causal inference is enhanced
by temporal ordering
8Features of Understanding Society
- Large sample size 40,000 households, around
100,000 individuals - Ethnicity strand ethnic minority boost allows
robust analyses of different ethnic groups - Bio-social collection of additional bio-social
data collected by interviewers and nurse height,
weight, cognitive function, blood - Data linkage information collected during the
survey will be linked, with the consent of the
respondent, to administrative and geographical
data - Innovative an panel of 1,500 households is used
to test new ways of collecting data
9Key features Large sample size
- 40,000 households gives an opportunity to explore
issues where other longitudinal surveys are too
small. - Permits analysis of small subgroups (teenage
parents, disabled people etc) - Analysis at regional and sub-regional levels
effects of geographic variation in policy - High-resolution analysis of events in time
single-year age cohorts - Household focus data on all members of
household and interactions within household
(consumption, income within-household sharing
is crucial) - Better and more continuous information on family
and household environment within which early
development takes place - Observe multiple generations and siblings allow
examination of long-term transmission processes
and isolate effects of commonly-shared family
characteristics - Explore linkages outside the household (external
transfers, extended family contact)
10Key features Ethnicity strand
- The ethnicity strand refers to the whole
approach towards ethnicity in the study - Focus on issues of diversity and commonality
- Self-identification of ethnic group
- Country of birth
- Background parents and grandparents ethnicity
and countries of birth - Identity importance to sense of self
- Behaviour and beliefs
- Migration history
- Common questionnaire content across the sample
for many questions, including some ethnicity
related questions - Additional questionnaire content within the
ethnic minority boost - General Population comparison sample
11Key features Biomedical research
- Biosocial study
- Opportunity to assess exposure and antecedent
factors of health status, understanding disease
mechanisms (e.g. gene-environment interaction,
gene-to-function links), household and
socioeconomic effects and analysis of outcomes
using direct assessments or data linkage. - Opens up prospects for advances at the interface
between social science and biomedical research. - Cognitive function Wave 3
- Nurse visits (GB only)
- Bio-marker collection started after Wave 2
(Understanding Society) and Wave 3 (BHPS), with a
follow-up nurse visit to around 6,000 households
in England, Scotland and Wales - Collect height, weight, waist circumference,
body-fat percentage, lung function, blood
pressure, grip strength and blood - Interviewer collection of biomarkers (planned)
- Pilot to test iBio in April 2011
- Interviewers collect height, weight, waist
circumference, body-fat percentage, blood
pressure, grip strength and dried blood spots or
saliva
12Cognitive Ability/Functioning Full Sample at W3
13Key Features linkage to administrative records
- At Wave 1 asked respondents for permission to
link to - Health records
- Education records
- At a future wave, also ask for linkage to
benefits and tax records - Parents were asked for permission on behalf of
children lt 16 - Will provide validation data e.g. for
non-employment income receipts - Provide additional data not possible to collect
in context of a survey interview - Link survey data to a range of geo-coded data
14Key Features Innovative
- Innovation
- Administrative data linkage
- Facility for geo-coded links
- Innovation panel
- Data collection moving to multiple modes
- Looking to develop qualitative research combined
with quantitative data collection - Test bed for development of new scientific theory
and give momentum to the development of new
methodological and analytical tools and
techniques - Support development in experimental research and
understanding the behaviour underlying survey
non-response, measurement error and other
barriers to high-quality quantitative research
15Potential for Understanding Society
- Long-term, annual interview
- As the panel matures over the next 20 years (we
hope!) longer-term processes can be observed - Regular interviews ensure the capture of short
and longer-term change in society - Frequency of data collection means that the
timing and duration of events can be observed
close to the time at which they occur
16Potential for Understanding Society
- Multi-purpose/multi-topic
- Ethnic minority strand
- Bio-social agenda
- A very wide range of research agendas, bringing
together information on many life-course domains - Interdisciplinary
- aims both to meet needs of traditional panel use
disciplines (economics, social policy and
sociology) - support more interdisciplinary work within the
social sciences (e.g. geography and economics) - within the biomedical sciences (e.g. psychology
and genetics) - between the social and biomedical sciences.
17Design
18Understanding Society design
- 12 month intervals between interviews as per the
old BHPS/NIHPS - Continuous fieldwork over a 24 month period for
each wave in GB - January 2009 Wave 1 Year 1 starts
- January 2010 Wave 1 Year 2 starts Wave 2 Year
1 starts - January 2011 Wave 2 Year 2 starts Wave 3 Year
1 starts - The BHPS/NIHPS sample is integrated into Year 1
at Wave 2 - Continuous fieldwork over a 12 month period for
each wave in Northern Ireland - Respondents maintain the same initial monthly
allocation throughout the life of the survey - Face-to-face interview at Waves 1-4
- Intention is for mixed mode data collection at
Wave 5 - The IP is in field one year before the
corresponding main stage wave. - IP2 was mixed mode (telephone/face-to-face)
- IP5 is planned to be mixed mode
(telephone/web/face-to-face)
19Sample Understanding Society
- Great Britain sample
- Stratified, clustered sample of entire GB
residential population (incl. Highlands and
Islands). - Addresses drawn from PAF
- Primary sampling units are postal sectors in GB
- 2640 PSUs
- 110 sample points issued each month
- 18 addresses issued to each PSU (2640 X 18
47,520 issued addresses) - Northern Ireland sample
- Unclustered sample of residential population
- 2,400 addresses drawn systematically from Land
and Property Services Agency list of domestic
properties - Addresses allocated to 11 monthly samples
February and March slightly larger number to
maintain a representative sample at the quarterly
level
20Sample BHPS/NIHPS
- Great Britain 1991 sample
- Stratified, clustered sample of entire GB
residential population (south of the Caledonian
Canal). - 8,167 addresses drawn from Postcode Address file
- Primary sampling units are postal sectors in GB
- 250 PSUs
- Approx. 33 addresses issued to each PSU
- Boost samples
- 1999 Scotland/Wales
- similar design to 1991, except includes north of
Caledonian Canal - 75 PSUs in each country 30-33 addresses in each
PSU - 2001 Northern Ireland
- Unclustered sample of residential population
- 2,885 addresses drawn systematically from
Valuation and Land Agency list of domestic
properties 1,997 productive households
21Sample design ethnic minority boost
- In GB only (no NI cases)
- 43,000 addresses selected for screening
- Medium to high density ethnic minority areas
included in sample est. coverage 80 90 of
EM population - Designed to produce 1,000 individuals interviewed
in each of five main ethnic groups - Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Caribbean, Black
African plus all mixed backgrounds - Includes other ethnic minorities such as Chinese,
other Asian, Middle Eastern
22Sample design GP comparison sample and
Innovation Panel
- GP comparison sample (plus all ethnic minority
respondents in the GP sample in low density areas
who had no chance of selection in the boost
sample) - Receive additional 5 minutes of questions as for
the boost sample - One randomly sampled address in 40 of PSUs
- Of 2640 PSUs, 1,056 contain 1 comparison sample
address - To achieve 500 interviewed households
- All persons at those addresses treated the same
i.e. regardless of ethnic group - Innovation Panel
- Equal probability design as per the new GP sample
but GB only (south Caledonian Canal) - 120 PSUs/ 23 addresses per PSU
- Issued sample of 2760 addresses to achieve 1500
interviewed households (60 response rate of
eligible addresses)
23Eligible residents
- Definition of household
- Shared living accommodation/one meal per day
- Main residence
- Includes
- Long term holiday / boarding school / hospital
(temp. absent) - Still in halls of residence / institution (temp.
absent) - In prison returning to household
- Long-term au pairs
- 6 months continuous residence
- Adults working away if address is main
household - 6 month rule except for special groups
24Types of sample member
- OSM (Original Sample Member)
- In Wave 1 sample
- New babies of female OSM
- TSM (Temporary Sample Member)
- New household members
- PSM (Permanent Sample Member)
- Male TSM who has child with female OSM
- New Entrant
25Overview of interviewer activities
- Visit households
- Enumerate households (including new household
members) - Interview adults (aged 16), including new
household entrants - Administer adult and child self-completions
- Follow those who move from original households
(including children aged 0-15) - Trace movers to new address
- Interview mover and other residents at the new
address
26Where are we now?
27Understanding Society The story so far
- Wide consultation ongoing
- Academics, policy-makers, third sector,
grassroots organisations - Innovation Panel
- Wave 1 January 2008
- Wave 2 March 2009
- Wave 3 April 2010
- Cognitive Testing
- April/May 2008
- June 2009
- April/May 2010
28Understanding Society The story so far
- Translation Pilot June 2008
- Dress Rehearsal
- Wave 1 August/September 2008
- Wave 2 September-December 2009
- Wave 3 September-December 2010
- Wave 1 started January 8th, 2009 (until
December 2010) - Wave 2 started January 8th, 2010 (until
December 2011) - Wave 3 started January 8th, 2011 (until
December 2012) - Data available for Wave 1 Year 1 from the UK Data
Archive
29Understanding Society Coming up
- Innovation Panel Wave 4 March-May 2011
- Wave 4 consultation and development
- Wave 4 cognitive interviewing (March-April 2011)
- IP5 experiment competition
- iBio pilot April-June 2011
- Wave 4 Dress Rehearsal September-December 2011
- Development of mixed mode strategy and design
- Deposit of full Wave 1 data
- Deposit of Wave 2 Year 1 data
30Understanding Society study timetable
- January new Wave go into the field
- January-March IP developed
- January-March Next wave questionnaire drafted
- March-May IP in field
- March-June Next wave questionnaire cognitive
testing and finalised - March-June Next wave IP competition
- July-September Next wave script tested
- July-September Next IP developed
- September-December Next wave dress rehearsal
run-in - September-December Next IP specified, scripted
- September-December Next wave question development
31Sample sizes and response rates
32Household response
33Wave 1 (Year 1) sample numbers households
Eligible households only.
34Wave 2 (Year 1) sample numbers households (so
far)
November/December samples still in the field
Eligible households only.
35Individuals within co-operating households
Wave 2 is based on January-May data
36Wave 1 (Year 1) sample numbers individuals
Eligible individuals only.
37Wave 2 (Year 1) sample numbers individuals
(January-May data)
Eligible individuals only.
38Questionnaire content
39Structure of the interview
Adults (16)
CAPI 32.5 mins
Paper SC/CASI 10-15 mins
Paper SC 10-15 mins
40Understanding Society The individual
questionnaire
- For all aged 16 in the household, covers
- Initial conditions e.g., place of birth,
citizenship, qualifications, family background - Ethnicity and national identity, language,
religion, harassment - History of marriage and cohabitation, fertility
- Health and disability, caring
- Employment and non-employment, discrimination
- Childcare, parents and children, family networks
- Unearned income and state benefits
- Household finances
- Political affiliation and values, environmental
behaviour
41Youth questionnaire
- For 10 15 year olds (vs 11 15 on BHPS/NIHPS)
- Some BHPS/NIHPS content carried forward
- Understanding Society content also includes
- Use social websites
- Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire
- Relationship with parents/family members
- Bullying at school and by/to siblings
- More LSYPE comparable questions on education,
truancy, misbehaviour etc - Religion and ethnic group
- Illicit drugs/alcohol use and perceived risk of
harm (at w2) - Cultural and sports participation (at w2)
- Homework (at w2)
- Money and work (w3)
- Taking care of others (w3)
42Rotating modules and questions
- Length constraints acute
- Move away from BHPS/NIHPS structure where most
people are eligible to be asked all questions and
most questions repeated each wave. More use of - questions asked regularly, but not every wave
- triggered questions asked only after key events
- questions asked only at particular ages
- Decided that where a BHPS/NIHPS question had no
better replacement it would be carried forward
for comparability - But many questions cut or replaced or moved to a
rotating frequency
43Understanding Society new areas of interest vs
BHPS/NIHPS
- Family and social networks outside the household
- Attitudes and behaviours related to environmental
issues - More on Illicit and risky behaviour especially
for young people - Psychological attributes
- Cognitive ability/functioning measures
- More on health outcomes and health related
behaviour - Quality of sleep
- Well-being
- Quality of marital relationships
- Risk and trust
- Collection of data about younger children lt 10
from parent - More data on transition into young adulthood
- Discrimination and harassment
- Ethnic and national identity
44Future content plans
45Aging
- Strategy is to ask a range of questions across
the life-course - General content repeated over time is a way to
study aging - Large sample means about 1,000 respondents at
each age lt 70, fewer older people - Specific age triggered content
- Children under age 10 Circumstances of birth if
newborn, breastfeeding, physical and
psycho-social development at key ages, and
parenting of children, childcare arrangements, to
name a few. - Youth 10-15 year old qre Adult content that
mirrors youth qre for 16-24 year olds including
expectations employment, family, education, other
experiences. - Mid-Life Retirement planning and expectations
(w2) for those not currently retired at age 40,
45, 50, 55, 60, 65
46Poverty
- Content that addresses issues of poverty mirrors
BHPS/NIHPS content, but also - Household expenditure, consumption (annual)
- Household deprivation, child deprivation
(rotating) - Behind in payments (annual)
- Wealth (rotating)
- Individual income from benefits and other sources
(annual) - Earnings (annual)
- Pensions Savings (rotating)
- Other covariates
47Drug Use
- Drug Use
- Youth questionnaire addresses this specifically
- Carrying forward alcohol, tobacco and illegal
drug use questions into Young Adult content (w3
annual) - Alcohol consumption amongst adults (w2 rotating)
- Prescription drug use in Nurse visit (w2 / w3)
- Local neighbourhood
- BHPS/NIHPS questions on neighbourhood conditions
- Fear of crime in neighbourhood
48For more information
- Questionnaires for waves 1 - 3 (including IP) are
in the intranet at - http//data.understandingsociety.org.uk/survey-mat
erials - Understanding Society working papers at
- http//research.understandingsociety.org.uk/publi
cations - Data available from the ESRC UK Data Archive
- http//www.esds.ac.uk/findingData/snDescription.as
p?sn6614 -