Literature DB >> 36083618

The Impact of Nonrandom Missingness in Surveillance Data for Population-Level Summaries: Simulation Study.

Paul Samuel Weiss1, Lance Allyn Waller1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Surveillance data are essential public health resources for guiding policy and allocation of human and capital resources. These data often consist of large collections of information based on nonrandom sample designs. Population estimates based on such data may be impacted by the underlying sample distribution compared to the true population of interest. In this study, we simulate a population of interest and allow response rates to vary in nonrandom ways to illustrate and measure the effect this has on population-based estimates of an important public health policy outcome.
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to illustrate the effect of nonrandom missingness on population-based survey sample estimation.
METHODS: We simulated a population of respondents answering a survey question about their satisfaction with their community's policy regarding vaccination mandates for government personnel. We allowed response rates to differ between the generally satisfied and dissatisfied and considered the effect of common efforts to control for potential bias such as sampling weights, sample size inflation, and hypothesis tests for determining missingness at random. We compared these conditions via mean squared errors and sampling variability to characterize the bias in estimation arising under these different approaches.
RESULTS: Sample estimates present clear and quantifiable bias, even in the most favorable response profile. On a 5-point Likert scale, nonrandom missingness resulted in errors averaging to almost a full point away from the truth. Efforts to mitigate bias through sample size inflation and sampling weights have negligible effects on the overall results. Additionally, hypothesis testing for departures from random missingness rarely detect the nonrandom missingness across the widest range of response profiles considered.
CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that assuming surveillance data are missing at random during analysis could provide estimates that are widely different from what we might see in the whole population. Policy decisions based on such potentially biased estimates could be devastating in terms of community disengagement and health disparities. Alternative approaches to analysis that move away from broad generalization of a mismeasured population at risk are necessary to identify the marginalized groups, where overall response may be very different from those observed in measured respondents. ©Paul Samuel Weiss, Lance Allyn Waller. Originally published in JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (https://publichealth.jmir.org), 09.09.2022.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bias; data; estimates; estimation; health policy; missing data; policy decision; population-level estimates; public health policy; response rate; surveillance

Mesh:

Year:  2022        PMID: 36083618     DOI: 10.2196/37887

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JMIR Public Health Surveill        ISSN: 2369-2960


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