| Literature DB >> 17543100 |
Julie Vallée1, Marc Souris, Florence Fournet, Audrey Bochaton, Virginie Mobillion, Karine Peyronnie, Gérard Salem.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Geographical objectives and probabilistic methods are difficult to reconcile in a unique health survey. Probabilistic methods focus on individuals to provide estimates of a variable's prevalence with a certain precision, while geographical approaches emphasise the selection of specific areas to study interactions between spatial characteristics and health outcomes. A sample selected from a small number of specific areas creates statistical challenges: the observations are not independent at the local level, and this results in poor statistical validity at the global level. Therefore, it is difficult to construct a sample that is appropriate for both geographical and probability methods.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17543100 PMCID: PMC1894791 DOI: 10.1186/1742-7622-4-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Themes Epidemiol ISSN: 1742-7622
Figure 1Urban stratification in Vientiane. 3 areas of decreasing degree of urbanization can be distinguished in Vientiane: a central zone, a first belt and a second belt of urbanization.
Number of combinations in every urban stratum
| Central zone | First urbanised belt | Second urbanised belt | |
| Number of villages | 25 | 67 | 56 |
| Number of possible groups of 3 adjacent villages | 102 | 209 | 92 |
| Number of possible combinations of 3 groups of 3 adjacent villages | 46 828 | 999 140 | 60 225 |
| Number of possible combinations of 3 groups of 3 adjacent villages which respect proportions of urbanization types. | 6 819 | 10 851 | 2 408 |
Figure 212 urban sub-strata in Vientiane: 3 sub-strata in the central zone, 4 in the first urbanised belt and 5 in the second urbanised belt.
Figure 3Spatial distribution of proportion with Lao nationality in 1995. The majority of non-Lao people (mainly Vietnamese and Chinese) live in the central zone of Vientiane.
Figure 4Spatial distribution of proportion of literate people in 1995. Spatial distribution of literate people is particularly heterogeneous in the first and second belt of urbanization.
Figure 527 selected villages for health survey. In every selected village (clustered), around 74 adults and 74 children were planned to be interviewed.
Characteristics (in 1995 census) of selected combinations in comparison with the corresponding urban stratum
| Lao nationality | Literate people | ||||
| Proportion (%) | Variance* | Proportion (%) | Variance* | ||
| Central zone | 27 villages | 89.9 | 0.00424 | 77.7 | 0.00118 |
| 9 selected villages | 89.4 | 0.00441 | 76.4 | 0.00117 | |
| First urbanised belt | 67 villages | 98.3 | 0.00050 | 79.1 | 0.00198 |
| 9 selected villages | 98.1 | 0.00040 | 77.4 | 0.00196 | |
| Second urbanised belt | 56 villages | 99.5 | 0.00012 | 73.8 | 0.00325 |
| 9 selected villages | 99.7 | 0.00001 | 70.5 | 0.00341 | |
* For 9 selected villages, variance corresponds to the mean difference (high squared) between the proportion in every 9 villages and the mean proportion calculated at the layer level.