| Literature DB >> 32459645 |
Sungai T Chabata1, Elizabeth Fearon2, Emily L Webb3, Helen A Weiss3, James R Hargreaves4, Frances M Cowan1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Population size estimates (PSEs) for hidden populations at increased risk of HIV, including female sex workers (FSWs), are important to inform public health policy and resource allocation. The service multiplier method (SMM) is commonly used to estimate the sizes of hidden populations. We used this method to obtain PSEs for FSWs at 9 sites in Zimbabwe and explored methods for assessing potential biases that could arise in using this approach.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; Zimbabwe; female sex workers; key populations; population size estimation; respondent-driven sampling; service multiplier method
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32459645 PMCID: PMC7325001 DOI: 10.2196/15044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Public Health Surveill ISSN: 2369-2960
Respondent-driven sampling and service multiplier method assumptions.
| Assumption | Criteria | Expected outcome | ||
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| Reciprocity (N/Ab) | Ask participants’ relationship to the person who gave them a study coupon and if they say | Participants more likely to be recruited by friends and acquaintances. |
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| Sampling with replacement (N/A) | Always violated in real-life RDSc studies, when the RDS successive sampling estimator is not used. | —d |
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| Accurate report of personal network size (N/A) | Sensitivity analysis of different network size questions. | RDS estimates should agree with each other regardless of different network size questions used. |
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| Final sample independent of the original seeds | Assess whether seed dependence was removed using convergence plots. | Overall estimate of |
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| Completely connected networked population at each site | Assess whether the FSWe population is networked using bottleneck plots. | Estimate of |
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| Random recruitment | Assess whether there is an indication of nonrandom recruitment by measuring recruitment homophily. | Recruitment homophily should be approximately 1. |
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| Two data sources combined are drawn from the same population, with the RDS data being representative of the target population | Compare sociodemographic and other characteristics of RDS surveys participants reporting program attendance with records of program attenders for the same time reference using logistic regression. | No evidence of difference in characteristics of RDS surveys participants who report program attendance within the reference period and the characteristics of program attenders in the program dataset during the reference period. | |
| All members of the population being counted should have a chance of being included in both sources | Assess if all RDS surveys participants are familiar with the existence of the program by using chi-square tests to compare characteristics of individuals who had ever heard of the program with those who had not across sites. | No evidence of difference between individuals who had ever heard of the program with those who had not. | ||
| Data sources should have the same and clear time references, age ranges, geographic areas and individuals should not be counted more than once in each data source. | Assess if time references, age ranges and geographic areas of RDS and program data are similar or not; deduplicate program data if participants visited the program several times during the reference period. | Report if time references, age ranges and geographic areas are similar or not. | ||
| The 2 data sources should be independent of each other, that is inclusion of individuals in 1 source should not be related to the inclusion of individuals in the other source. | Do not identify seeds and participants in general through the program; given that seed participants might also be more likely to be program attenders, even if they are not selected on this basis, assess convergence of | Report how RDS participants were identified and recruited; overall estimate of | ||
aRDS-II: RDS Volz-Heckathorn estimator.
bN/A: denotes the assumptions that could not be investigated with the data available in this study.
cRDS: respondent-driven sampling.
dAssumption always violated when other RDS estimators (not the RDS successive sampling estimator) are used.
eFSWs: female sex workers.
Population size estimates of female sex workers and 95% CI.
| Site | RDSa sample size | Number of FSWsb who attended the program within the last 6 months (M) | SE for Mc | Percentd reporting visit ( | SE for P | Population size estimate | SE for the population size estimatee | 95% CI | Percent of FSWs among all women aged 15 to 49 years |
| 1 | 220 | 57 | 7.4 | 20.3 (11.6-29.1) | 4.5 | 281 | 70.1 | 133-407 | 0.8 |
| 2 | 196 | 100 | 10.0 | 25.0 (15.3-34.7) | 4.9 | 400 | 87.2 | 225-566 | 4.8 |
| 3 | 153 | 111 | 10.5 | 46.1 (35.1-57.1) | 5.7 | 241 | 37.2 | 166-311 | 2.8 |
| 4 | 202 | 372 | 19.2 | 68.7 (60.8-76.5) | 4 | 541 | 42.0 | 455-619 | 3.5 |
| 5 | 197 | 84 | 9.2 | 20.6 (5.4-35.8) | 7.8 | 408 | 160.4 | 93-722 | 3.9 |
| 6 | 200 | 28 | 5.3 | 14.3 (5.6-22.4) | 4.2 | 194 | 67.0 | 62-325 | 2.6 |
| 7 | 165 | 34 | 5.8 | 11.0 (7.2-14.8) | 1.9 | 310 | 75.4 | 162-458 | 1.2 |
| 8 | 198 | 46 | 6.8 | 16.7 (7.4-26.1) | 4.8 | 275 | 88.7 | 101-449 | 3.0 |
| 9 | 208 | 165 | 12.8 | 20.5 (12.4-28.7) | 4.2 | 805 | 175.1 | 456-1142 | 2.6 |
aRDS: respondent-driven sampling.
bFSWs: female sex workers.
cCalculated using the normal approximation to Poisson distribution.
dRDS-II adjusted percentages.
eCalculated using the delta method.
Figure 1Site convergence plots. RDS-II: respondent-driven sampling Volz-Heckathorn estimator.
Figure 2Site bottleneck plots. RDS-II: respondent-driven sampling Volz-Heckathorn estimator.
Recruitment homophily in P.
| Site | Recruitment homophily in |
| 1 | 1.39 |
| 2 | 1.14 |
| 3 | 1.04 |
| 4 | 0.96 |
| 5 | 1.05 |
| 6 | 0.97 |
| 7 | 1.00 |
| 8 | 0.92 |
| 9 | 1.21 |
Association between sociodemographic characteristics and knowledge of program existence among respondent-driven sampling survey participants by site.
| Characteristics | Total individuals (N=1739), n | Individuals who have ever heard about the program (N=803), n (%) | Comparison | Interaction | |||||
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| .40 | .40 | |||||||
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| 18-24 | 418 | 174 (36.8) |
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| 25-29 | 424 | 202 (40.1) |
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| 30-39 | 597 | 284 (43.1) |
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| 40+ | 299 | 143 (44.6) |
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| .06 | .10 | |||||||
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| Never married | 356 | 170 (42.1) |
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| Married or widowed | 335 | 139 (33.3) |
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| Divorced or separated | 1047 | 494 (43.31) |
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| .02 | .47 | |||||||
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| Primary or none | 531 | 209 (35.7) |
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| Secondary or higher | 1192 | 590 (44.13) |
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| .87 | .23 | |||||||
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| <18 | 343 | 157 (41.5) |
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| 18-24 | 630 | 284 (39.3) |
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| 25-29 | 398 | 195 (42.9) |
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| >30 | 367 | 167 (41.2) |
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| .32 | .52 | |||||||
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| 0-1 | 186 | 86 (36.8) |
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| 2-5 | 587 | 245 (39.3) |
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| >5 | 956 | 468 (43.7) |
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| .13 | .02 | |||||||
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| 0 | 79 | 43 (49) |
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| 1 | 372 | 179 (40.6) |
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| 2-4 | 1031 | 457 (38.83) |
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| >5 | 256 | 124 (50.4) |
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| .24 | .32 | |||||||
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| 0 | 132 | 59 (36.6) |
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| 1-4 | 705 | 312 (38.2) |
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| 5-9 | 415 | 205 (45.2) |
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| >10 | 486 | 227 (44.7) |
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| .24 | .01 | |||||||
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| 0 | 360 | 167 (37.5) |
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| 1-2 | 912 | 425 (43.8) |
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| >3 | 466 | 211 (38.7) |
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| No | 110 | 36 (27.0) |
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| Yes | 1628 | 767 (42.02) |
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| .50 | .89 | |||||||
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| 1 | 292 | 124 (38.3) |
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| 2-4 | 910 | 431 (42.2) |
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| >5 | 417 | 209 (44.9) |
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| .36 | .93 | |||||||
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| Negative | 898 | 413 (40.7) |
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| Positive | 720 | 349 (44.0) |
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| .91 | .32 | |||||||
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| Consistent | 1180 | 540 (40.79) |
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| Nonconsistent | 369 | 171 (40.3) |
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aChi-square P value for the association of each characteristic with knowledge of program existence.
bP value assessing the interaction between sociodemographic characteristics and site.
cFSWs: female sex workers.
dAmong those ever tested for HIV.
Comparison of sociodemographic characteristics of individuals who attended the program and individuals who reported program use in respondent-despondent sampling surveys.
| Characteristic | Individuals who reported program use in RDSa data (N=535), n (%a) | Individuals who actually attended the program (N=997), n (%) | Comparison | Interaction | |
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| .88 | .67 | |||
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| 18-24 | 108 (22.4) | 187 (19.2) |
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| 25-29 | 137 (22.7) | 246 (25.2) |
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| 30-39 | 192 (35.1) | 370 (38.0) |
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| >40 | 98 (19.8) | 171 (17.6) |
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| .61 | .52 | |||
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| Never married | 110 (19.4) | 194 (19.8) |
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| Married or widowed | 93 (15.3) | 192 (19.6) |
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| Divorced or separated | 332 (65.3) | 594 (60.6) |
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| .47 | .16 | |||
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| Primary or none | 146 (31.7) | 243 (28.0) |
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| Secondary or higher | 386 (68.3) | 625 (72.0) |
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| .01 | .22 | |||
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| 0-1 | 64 (16.1) | 225 (25.3) |
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| >2 | 467 (83.9) | 666 (74.7) |
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| .42 | .17 | |||
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| 0 | 108 (23.0) | 238 (24.0) |
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| 1-2 | 288 (56.6) | 593 (59.8) |
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| >3 | 139 (20.4) | 161 (16.2) |
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| .18 | .75 | |||
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| No | 26 (4.9) | 64 (6.6) |
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| Yes | 509 (95.1) | 911 (93.4) |
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| .42 | .48 | |||
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| Negative | 262 (53.4) | 442 (49.7) |
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| Positive | 242 (46.6) | 447 (50.3) |
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aRDS-II (respondent-driven sampling) weighted percentages.
bWald P value comparing program data with RDS data.
cP value assessing the interaction between sociodemographic characteristics and the site.