OBJECTIVE: To explore, post hoc, whether a large decline in smoking estimates between the 2005 and 2006 New Jersey Adult Tobacco Surveys is real or spurious given various methodological and environmental changes between the 2 time periods of data collection. METHODS: Using multiple data sources, we explored survey timing, poststratification approach, midinterview terminations, wireless substitution, and question order. RESULTS: Changes in question order were likely responsible for the majority of the unexpected decline in smoking prevalence; to a lesser degree, wireless substitution and midinterview terminations also likely contributed to an artificially exaggerated decline. CONCLUSION: Methodological changes can artificially affect trends in prevalence estimates.
OBJECTIVE: To explore, post hoc, whether a large decline in smoking estimates between the 2005 and 2006 New Jersey Adult Tobacco Surveys is real or spurious given various methodological and environmental changes between the 2 time periods of data collection. METHODS: Using multiple data sources, we explored survey timing, poststratification approach, midinterview terminations, wireless substitution, and question order. RESULTS: Changes in question order were likely responsible for the majority of the unexpected decline in smoking prevalence; to a lesser degree, wireless substitution and midinterview terminations also likely contributed to an artificially exaggerated decline. CONCLUSION: Methodological changes can artificially affect trends in prevalence estimates.
Authors: Michael J Boysun; Julie E Maher; Michael J Stark; Barbara A Pizacani; Kristen Rohde; Julia Dilley; Katrina Wynkoop Simmons Journal: Prev Chronic Dis Date: 2005-12-15 Impact factor: 2.830