Parity of indigenous and non-indigenous women in Brazil: does the reported number of children born depend upon who answers national census questions?

Taking parity as the main analytic variable, the objective of this study is to investigate whether the patterns of response to national census questions in Brazil differ when Indigenous and non-Indigenous women are compared, taking into consideration whether the information was provided by the women...

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Main Authors: Ricardo Ventura Santos, João Luiz Bastos, Oswaldo Gonçalves Cruz, Luciene Aparecida Ferreira de Barros Longo, Nancy May Flowers, Nilza de Oliveira Martins Pereira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4397089?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-1a1d1d4683944578a8254af4519989632020-11-24T21:26:33ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01104e012382610.1371/journal.pone.0123826Parity of indigenous and non-indigenous women in Brazil: does the reported number of children born depend upon who answers national census questions?Ricardo Ventura SantosJoão Luiz BastosOswaldo Gonçalves CruzLuciene Aparecida Ferreira de Barros LongoNancy May FlowersNilza de Oliveira Martins PereiraTaking parity as the main analytic variable, the objective of this study is to investigate whether the patterns of response to national census questions in Brazil differ when Indigenous and non-Indigenous women are compared, taking into consideration whether the information was provided by the women directly or by a proxy respondent (another household member or a non-resident). We use data on children ever born to Indigenous and non-Indigenous women from two Brazilian regions, the Northeast and the North. Data on the number of household members, total household rooms, interviewee's color/race, educational attainment, age, parity, and type of respondent were obtained from the 2010 Brazilian census. The relation between color/race and reported parity, as well as the impact of the type of respondent on this association were assessed with the Zero-inflated Negative Binomial regression, stratified by region (North and Northeast) and urban/rural status. Just over half of census interviewees answered directly the census questions (51.2% in the North and 54.4% in the Northeast). Indigenous women in the North region had the highest percentage of interviews carried out with a non-resident (12.7% total; 15.0% and 3.0% in rural and urban areas, respectively). Regardless of color/race, parity means were considerably higher when the question was answered by the woman directly (93.5%-101.4% and 15.6%-21.7% higher, compared co-resident and non-resident based answers, respectively). Parity underreporting was particularly strong in Indigenous women living in the rural North (16.0% less in comparison to White women). Proxy respondents tend to underestimate the count of children, particularly among Indigenous women from the North. The implementation of certain methodological alternatives in the Brazilian national censuses, such as the selection and training of census takers to work specifically in Indigenous territories, might be a productive means to improve data collection.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4397089?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ricardo Ventura Santos
João Luiz Bastos
Oswaldo Gonçalves Cruz
Luciene Aparecida Ferreira de Barros Longo
Nancy May Flowers
Nilza de Oliveira Martins Pereira
spellingShingle Ricardo Ventura Santos
João Luiz Bastos
Oswaldo Gonçalves Cruz
Luciene Aparecida Ferreira de Barros Longo
Nancy May Flowers
Nilza de Oliveira Martins Pereira
Parity of indigenous and non-indigenous women in Brazil: does the reported number of children born depend upon who answers national census questions?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Ricardo Ventura Santos
João Luiz Bastos
Oswaldo Gonçalves Cruz
Luciene Aparecida Ferreira de Barros Longo
Nancy May Flowers
Nilza de Oliveira Martins Pereira
author_sort Ricardo Ventura Santos
title Parity of indigenous and non-indigenous women in Brazil: does the reported number of children born depend upon who answers national census questions?
title_short Parity of indigenous and non-indigenous women in Brazil: does the reported number of children born depend upon who answers national census questions?
title_full Parity of indigenous and non-indigenous women in Brazil: does the reported number of children born depend upon who answers national census questions?
title_fullStr Parity of indigenous and non-indigenous women in Brazil: does the reported number of children born depend upon who answers national census questions?
title_full_unstemmed Parity of indigenous and non-indigenous women in Brazil: does the reported number of children born depend upon who answers national census questions?
title_sort parity of indigenous and non-indigenous women in brazil: does the reported number of children born depend upon who answers national census questions?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Taking parity as the main analytic variable, the objective of this study is to investigate whether the patterns of response to national census questions in Brazil differ when Indigenous and non-Indigenous women are compared, taking into consideration whether the information was provided by the women directly or by a proxy respondent (another household member or a non-resident). We use data on children ever born to Indigenous and non-Indigenous women from two Brazilian regions, the Northeast and the North. Data on the number of household members, total household rooms, interviewee's color/race, educational attainment, age, parity, and type of respondent were obtained from the 2010 Brazilian census. The relation between color/race and reported parity, as well as the impact of the type of respondent on this association were assessed with the Zero-inflated Negative Binomial regression, stratified by region (North and Northeast) and urban/rural status. Just over half of census interviewees answered directly the census questions (51.2% in the North and 54.4% in the Northeast). Indigenous women in the North region had the highest percentage of interviews carried out with a non-resident (12.7% total; 15.0% and 3.0% in rural and urban areas, respectively). Regardless of color/race, parity means were considerably higher when the question was answered by the woman directly (93.5%-101.4% and 15.6%-21.7% higher, compared co-resident and non-resident based answers, respectively). Parity underreporting was particularly strong in Indigenous women living in the rural North (16.0% less in comparison to White women). Proxy respondents tend to underestimate the count of children, particularly among Indigenous women from the North. The implementation of certain methodological alternatives in the Brazilian national censuses, such as the selection and training of census takers to work specifically in Indigenous territories, might be a productive means to improve data collection.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4397089?pdf=render
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