Title: Total Survey Error in Disability Assessments
1Total Survey Error in Disability Assessments
- Measuring Physical and Cognitive Capacity in the
National Health and Aging Trends Study (NHATS) - Brad Edwards and Tamara Bruce, Westat
- Presented at the International Total Survey Error
Workshop Quebec, Canada - June 2011
2Overview
- NHATS and capacity measures
- Self report and performance
- NHATS assessments
- Strategies for error reduction
- design, training, standardization, parsing out
nonresponse - Pretest results
- National experience
- Future research
3NHATS
- Westat working with a team led by Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health - Funded through cooperative agreement from NIA
- CAPI panel study with 9,000 Medicare
beneficiaries, annual interviews starting 2011 - New and improved measures of disability for
producing data on trends and trajectories
self-reports, mental and physical assessments,
eventually biomarkers, links with admin data
4Conceptual Framework
- Blend of Nagis model and WHO perspective
- Distinguish explicitly between
- Capacity to do something basic building blocks
- What people actually do in actual environment
activities - Accommodations may fill gap
5Capacity Is Critical
- Measures of capacity over time are key elements
in understanding individual patterns of
progression to activity limitations. They allow
us to track trends in function that are
independent of environmental changes or
accommodations, for understanding the disablement
process, and as targets for interventions to
prevent or slow disability.
6Reducing Error in Capacity Measures
- Questionnaire design
- Importance of performance measures
- Challenges for quality management
- New to surveys
- Complex
- Expect high level of interviewer variance
7Physical Capacity Upper Extremity
- Able to
- Put book on shelf/reach overhead
- Open jar/grasp small object
8Physical Capacity Lower Extremity
- Able to
- Walk 6/3 blocks?
- Kneel/bend over?
- Lift and carry 20/10 pounds?
- Walk up 20/10 stairs?
- Walking speed
- Balance stands
- Side by side
- Semi-tandem
- Full-tandem
- One leg eyes open
- One leg eyes closed
- Chair stands
9Cognitive Capacity Memory
- At present time?
- Memory problems interfere with activities?
- Memory compared to one year ago?
- 10 word recall
- Immediate
- Delayed
10Other Cognitive Performance Measures
- Orientation
- Day of week, date, naming President and Vice
President - Overall cognitive screening/executive function
- Clock drawing
- Attention interference/executive function
- Stroop test (computerized)
11Standardizing Administration
- Performance measures of capacity can be hard to
standardize in large-scale surveys with lay
interviewers - NHATS uses multiple methods to improve
consistency accuracy - Activities Booklet design use within CAPI
framework - Standardized presentation of cognitive tasks
using flash displays - Survey design interviewer feedback using CARI
coding - Formal certification process using live
respondents - Follow-up web-based recertification
12Training Approaches
- Broader scope of demands on NHATS interviewers
for performance measures - tests require using a variety of equipment
- navigation of unfamiliar environments
- potentially uncomfortable instructions to
respondents - Integration of video components
- recruitment
- in-person interviewer training modules such as
walking course - certification re-certification processes
13Walking Course Timing 1
14Walking Course Timing 2
15Walking Course Timing 3
16Training Video Demo
17Item Nonresponse
- Performance measures used in depth set of
exclusion criteria to minimize burden - High completion rate for both cognitive
performance tasks for those eligible - Comprehensive list of reasons why test was not
conducted allow detailed analyses - Majority of unit nonresponse due to inability to
complete easier task safety concerns - Performance related to age, health rating, care
setting, memory
18Respondent Reactions
- Avoiding test and performance
- Training interviewers how to respond to requests
(e.g., How did I do?) - Physical activities 7th inning stretch
- Positive feedback at the end
- Interest in assessing respondent satisfaction and
rapport in relation to nonresponse in later rounds
19Comparison of Performance and Self Report
- High functioning performance group (attempting
one-leg balance stands, meeting accuracy
thresholds for Stroop) reported better
self-reported health and memory and (for the
Stroop) had higher performance on two memory tests
20Comparison with Other Surveys
- NLTCS screening questions in NHATS form a bridge
from previous trend data to detailed NHATS self
reports and assessments - Possibility of future bridge to 6 disability
questions developed by NCHS and used on the
American Community Survey
21Conclusions
- Reducing error in capacity measures based on
performance assessment - sharpens understanding of individual trajectories
and accommodations - is expected to improve predictive ability for
health outcomes - NHATS protocol
- standardizes administration
- focuses on reasons for nonresponse
22Conclusions (2)
- As a new survey, NHATS has been able to give
consideration to the implications of doing these
types of assessments from the outset, starting
with interviewer recruitment and training.
Experience from pretesting has led to refinements
of these procedures (e.g., use of videos in
recruitment certification procedures in
training) and to the NHATS Activities Booklet.
Training materials and data collection
instruments will be available later this year at
www.nhats.org.
23Future Research
- Interviewer variance study
- Examination of
- interviewer and respondent conditioning effects
- drift trajectories
- item nonresponse as predictor of unit nonresponse
- Error comparison/tradeoffs between self-reports
and performance - Analysis of cognitive performance and data
quality - More development
- distance learning
- SPC charts, integration with paradata for
management - re-certification via WebEX, 2-way video
24For more info, contact Brad Edwards
bradedwards_at_westat.com or Tamara Bruce
tamarabruce_at_westat.com