1. A field test of three LQAS designs to assess the prevalence of acute malnutrition
- Author
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Mary Hennigan, Kari Egge, Megan Deitchler, Soledad Fernandez, and Joseph J. Valadez
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Quality Assurance, Health Care ,Epidemiology ,Research methodology ,Population ,Primary health care ,Sampling Studies ,Health services ,Independent samples ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Computer Simulation ,Child ,education ,Developing Countries ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Malnutrition ,General Medicine ,Anthropometry ,Nutrition Surveys ,medicine.disease ,Research Design ,Starvation ,Acute Disease ,Ethiopia ,Lot quality assurance sampling ,business ,Demography - Abstract
The conventional method for assessing the prevalence of Global Acute Malnutrition (GAM) in emergency settings is the 30 x 30 cluster-survey. This study describes alternative approaches: three Lot Quality Assurance Sampling (LQAS) designs to assess GAM. The LQAS designs were field-tested and their results compared with those from a 30 x 30 cluster-survey.Computer simulations confirmed that small clusters instead of a simple random sample could be used for LQAS assessments of GAM. Three LQAS designs were developed (33 x 6, 67 x 3, Sequential design) to assess GAM thresholds of 10, 15 and 20%. The designs were field-tested simultaneously with a 30 x 30 cluster-survey in Siraro, Ethiopia during June 2003. Using a nested study design, anthropometric, morbidity and vaccination data were collected on all children 6-59 months in sampled households. Hypothesis tests about GAM thresholds were conducted for each LQAS design. Point estimates were obtained for the 30 x 30 cluster-survey and the 33 x 6 and 67 x 3 LQAS designs.Hypothesis tests showed GAM as10% for the 33 x 6 design and GAM asor =10% for the 67 x 3 and Sequential designs. Point estimates for the 33 x 6 and 67 x 3 designs were similar to those of the 30 x 30 cluster-survey for GAM (6.7%, CI = 3.2-10.2%; 8.2%, CI = 4.3-12.1%, 7.4%, CI = 4.8-9.9%) and all other indicators. The CIs for the LQAS designs were only slightly wider than the CIs for the 30 x 30 cluster-survey; yet the LQAS designs required substantially less time to administer.The LQAS designs provide statistically appropriate alternatives to the more time-consuming 30 x 30 cluster-survey. However, additional field-testing is needed using independent samples rather than a nested study design.
- Published
- 2007
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