Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

As More And More Americans Say No To Federal Health Survey, Officials Plan Big Changes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Nov, 2015 11:33 AM
    NEW YORK — When the government launched what would become most influential survey to monitor the nation's public health, there were just 75 questions — and 95 per cent of those asked agreed to sit for it.
     
    But that was nearly 60 years ago, and the National Health Interview Survey has mushroomed along with the government and its interests. There are now 1,200 potential questions, and the average family takes more than 90 minutes to complete the survey.
     
    Not surprisingly, the refusal rate has gone up, as well: Thirty per cent are refusing to take part. And that has raised concerns that the survey — conducted in people's homes — has gotten too big.
     
    "If you tell them it's going to take an hour and it could be longer... right away people are going to say no," said Joseph Paysen, who oversees the survey in the New York City area.
     
    These and other issues have prompted plans for dramatic changes. But as government officials embark on a redesign, they're contending with bureaucratic obstacles and pleas from researchers who want more questions asked, not less.
     
    "They're kind of in a hard place," observed James Lepkowski, a survey research expert at the University of Michigan.
     
    U.S. Census Bureau workers conduct the survey every year, on behalf of another federal agency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It's a $30 million annual project, and somewhere around 50,000 people answer the survey's questions each year.
     
    Their answers have shaped our understanding of topics ranging from how common arthritis is to how many people get X-rays to what proportion of U.S. children suffers seizures. The survey's responses also are the foundation of how we measure the nation's progress (or backslide) on problems like obesity and smoking.
     
    Tellingly, the CDC recently added questions to it about use of electronic cigarettes — even though other surveys already asked about that subject — because the agency wants a new, unimpeachable statistical baseline on the controversial topic.
     
    "It's been kind of the gold standard" for continuous, nationally-representative information on the American public's health, said Lynn Blewett, a University of Minnesota expert on health data.
     
    The survey has been a crucial source of health information for a long time.
     
    In the 1800s and early 1900s, infectious diseases ranked as the nation's leading causes of death, so most government health statistics involved births, deaths, and germ illnesses. But with the development of germ-fighting antibiotics and other advances, illnesses like heart disease and cancer became the top killers, and new kinds of statistics were needed.
     
    In 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed a law creating the health interview survey. The purpose was to learn how common chronic illnesses and disabilities were, and to learn about the characteristics and behaviours of people who had them. The survey began in 1957. It was placed under the CDC's umbrella in 1987.
     
    The survey's data became the basis for measuring the nation's progress in fighting disease. It spurred funding for a CDC arthritis program, and shaped the agency's policy on cervical cancer screening. It was the first federal household survey to track the growing popularity of cellphones. And it's been a primary measuring stick for how many people are gaining health insurance under the 2010 Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare.
     
    But now it's just one data source in a crowded field. The CDC has conducted or funded hundreds of surveys designed to improve researchers' understanding of peoples' health and health behaviours. That includes roughly 20 ongoing surveys of all or parts of the U.S. public. Many are focused on specific topics, like HIV or teen smoking.
     
    Meanwhile, people are being approached for political polls or other surveys, or asked for personal information by businesses trying to sell them things. Bombarded by so many solicitations, "you're not trusting" when approached to be part of the government health survey, said Susan Cochran, a UCLA researcher who works with the survey data.
     
    That uneasiness, coupled with people's busy schedules, means more and more potential participants decline. It's not just the health interview survey that's affected — response rates have been declining for surveys in general.
     
    No one's talking about doing away with the health interview survey, but there have been proposals to merge it with other government health surveys.
     
    But researchers and advocacy groups have been sharply opposed to the idea. Indeed, many of them want the survey to get bigger, not slimmer.
     
    "I'm concerned about mental health," Vickie Mays, a UCLA researcher who works with survey data. A more comprehensive, ongoing set of questions on that topic is needed to better understand the nation's psychological well-being, she said.
     
    Each survey also has a constituency within CDC, some located in at CDC headquarters in Atlanta and some at a CDC sub-agency — the National Center for Health Statistics — in Hyattsville, Maryland.
     
    "They have these silos," Lepkowski said.
     
    The CDC's budget has been relatively flat over the last decade, and in some years, the health interview survey has had to cut back the number of people interviewed, even though smaller samples can weaken the accuracy of a survey's findings. The survey benefited from an extra $5 million to $7 million a year after passage of the Affordable Care Act, engineered by Obama administration officials eager to demonstrate the law's impact. But that added money is ending and survey administrators expect a more modest budget moving forward.
     
    The CDC is currently soliciting public comment for a redesigned survey that's to be used starting in 2018.
     
    The last such redesign was in 1997, after the survey had crept up to a two-hour experience.
     
    Paysen — the New York supervisor who works for the Census Bureau — has watched families go through the health interview survey in recent years, and he has detected frustration with what seemed to them to be redundant questions.
     
    "The shorter it is," Paysen said, "the easier it will be."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Diwali Celebrated In European Parliament

    Diwali Celebrated In European Parliament
    For the first time, Diwali has been celebrated in the European Parliament here.

    Diwali Celebrated In European Parliament

    Man Tried For Racism Against Indian Family In Northern Ireland

    Man Tried For Racism Against Indian Family In Northern Ireland
    William Strain, 29, from County Down -- one of six counties that form Northern Ireland -- gave death threats to the family, living in an apartment directly below his house

    Man Tried For Racism Against Indian Family In Northern Ireland

    British-Indian Cult Leader Aravindan Balakrishnan Under Trial For Rape, Abuse

    British-Indian Cult Leader Aravindan Balakrishnan Under Trial For Rape, Abuse
    An Indian-origin Maoist cult leader is under trial on the charges of "psychologically stripping", raping and forcing women to perform degrading sex acts in London, a media report said.

    British-Indian Cult Leader Aravindan Balakrishnan Under Trial For Rape, Abuse

    Manitoba Government Plans To Remove Red Lights From Perimeter Highway

    Manitoba Government Plans To Remove Red Lights From Perimeter Highway
    Selinger says work is to start with four intersections south of the city where traffic lights will be removed and replaced with free-flowing interchanges.

    Manitoba Government Plans To Remove Red Lights From Perimeter Highway

    Donald Trump Says He Has An Instinct For Sensing Threats After Paris Attacks

    As the hunt for the perpetrators of the attacks in Paris continues, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said Monday that he is uniquely qualified to be commander-in-chief because he has an "instinct" for sensing threats.

    Donald Trump Says He Has An Instinct For Sensing Threats After Paris Attacks

    Riots Destroy Canadian Mine In Mozambique, Company's Second Project To Face Trouble

    Riots Destroy Canadian Mine In Mozambique, Company's Second Project To Face Trouble
    Police had been preventing access to the site because it was still occupied by rioters.

    Riots Destroy Canadian Mine In Mozambique, Company's Second Project To Face Trouble