1. Assessing the Representativeness of Population-Sampled Health Surveys Through Linkage to Administrative Data on Alcohol-Related Outcomes.
- Author
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Gorman, Emma, Leyland, Alastair H., McCartney, Gerry, White, Ian R., Katikireddi, Srinivasa Vittal, Rutherford, Lisa, Graham, Lesley, and Gray, Linsay
- Subjects
PUBLIC health surveillance ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATABASE evaluation ,CAUSES of death ,ALCOHOL drinking ,HOSPITAL care ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL record linkage ,POPULATION geography ,REFERENCE values ,DEATH certificates ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,RESEARCH bias ,DISEASE incidence ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,ALCOHOL-induced disorders ,ODDS ratio ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Health surveys are an important resource for monitoring population health, but selective nonresponse may impede valid inference. This study aimed to assess nonresponse bias in a population-sampled health survey in Scotland, with a focus on alcohol-related outcomes. Nonresponse bias was assessed by examining whether rates of alcohol-related harm (i.e., hospitalization or death) and all-cause mortality among respondents to the Scottish Health Surveys (from 1995 to 2010) were equivalent to those in the general population, and whether the extent of any bias varied according to sociodemographic attributes or over time. Data from consenting respondents (aged 20–64 years) to 6 Scottish Health Surveys were confidentially linked to death and hospitalization records and compared with general population counterparts. Directly age-standardized incidence rates of alcohol-related harm and all-cause mortality were lower among Scottish Health Survey respondents compared with the general population. For all years combined, the survey-to-population rate ratios were 0.69 (95% confidence interval: 0.61, 0.76) for the incidence of alcohol-related harm and 0.89 (95% confidence interval: 0.83, 0.96) for all-cause mortality. Bias was more pronounced among persons residing in more deprived areas; limited evidence was found for regional or temporal variation. This suggests that corresponding underestimation of population rates of alcohol consumption is likely to be socially patterned. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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