Precision, time, and cost: a comparison of three sampling designs in an emergency setting

<p>Abstract</p> <p>The conventional method to collect data on the health, nutrition, and food security status of a population affected by an emergency is a 30 × 30 cluster survey. This sampling method can be time and resource intensive and, accordingly, may not be the most appropri...

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Main Authors: Deconinck Hedwig, Deitchler Megan, Bergeron Gilles
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2008-05-01
Series:Emerging Themes in Epidemiology
Online Access:http://www.ete-online.com/content/5/1/6
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spelling doaj-e5983bb8a2da4edab5f05a7f338ac42d2020-11-24T21:33:53ZengBMCEmerging Themes in Epidemiology1742-76222008-05-0151610.1186/1742-7622-5-6Precision, time, and cost: a comparison of three sampling designs in an emergency settingDeconinck HedwigDeitchler MeganBergeron Gilles<p>Abstract</p> <p>The conventional method to collect data on the health, nutrition, and food security status of a population affected by an emergency is a 30 × 30 cluster survey. This sampling method can be time and resource intensive and, accordingly, may not be the most appropriate one when data are needed rapidly for decision making. In this study, we compare the precision, time and cost of the 30 × 30 cluster survey with two alternative sampling designs: a 33 × 6 cluster design (33 clusters, 6 observations per cluster) and a 67 × 3 cluster design (67 clusters, 3 observations per cluster). Data for each sampling design were collected concurrently in West Darfur, Sudan in September-October 2005 in an emergency setting. Results of the study show the 30 × 30 design to provide more precise results (i.e. narrower 95% confidence intervals) than the 33 × 6 and 67 × 3 design for most child-level indicators. Exceptions are indicators of immunization and vitamin A capsule supplementation coverage which show a high intra-cluster correlation. Although the 33 × 6 and 67 × 3 designs provide wider confidence intervals than the 30 × 30 design for child anthropometric indicators, the 33 × 6 and 67 × 3 designs provide the opportunity to conduct a LQAS hypothesis test to detect whether or not a critical threshold of global acute malnutrition prevalence has been exceeded, whereas the 30 × 30 design does not. For the household-level indicators tested in this study, the 67 × 3 design provides the most precise results. However, our results show that neither the 33 × 6 nor the 67 × 3 design are appropriate for assessing indicators of mortality. In this field application, data collection for the 33 × 6 and 67 × 3 designs required substantially less time and cost than that required for the 30 × 30 design. The findings of this study suggest the 33 × 6 and 67 × 3 designs can provide useful time- and resource-saving alternatives to the 30 × 30 method of data collection in emergency settings.</p> http://www.ete-online.com/content/5/1/6
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Deconinck Hedwig
Deitchler Megan
Bergeron Gilles
spellingShingle Deconinck Hedwig
Deitchler Megan
Bergeron Gilles
Precision, time, and cost: a comparison of three sampling designs in an emergency setting
Emerging Themes in Epidemiology
author_facet Deconinck Hedwig
Deitchler Megan
Bergeron Gilles
author_sort Deconinck Hedwig
title Precision, time, and cost: a comparison of three sampling designs in an emergency setting
title_short Precision, time, and cost: a comparison of three sampling designs in an emergency setting
title_full Precision, time, and cost: a comparison of three sampling designs in an emergency setting
title_fullStr Precision, time, and cost: a comparison of three sampling designs in an emergency setting
title_full_unstemmed Precision, time, and cost: a comparison of three sampling designs in an emergency setting
title_sort precision, time, and cost: a comparison of three sampling designs in an emergency setting
publisher BMC
series Emerging Themes in Epidemiology
issn 1742-7622
publishDate 2008-05-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>The conventional method to collect data on the health, nutrition, and food security status of a population affected by an emergency is a 30 × 30 cluster survey. This sampling method can be time and resource intensive and, accordingly, may not be the most appropriate one when data are needed rapidly for decision making. In this study, we compare the precision, time and cost of the 30 × 30 cluster survey with two alternative sampling designs: a 33 × 6 cluster design (33 clusters, 6 observations per cluster) and a 67 × 3 cluster design (67 clusters, 3 observations per cluster). Data for each sampling design were collected concurrently in West Darfur, Sudan in September-October 2005 in an emergency setting. Results of the study show the 30 × 30 design to provide more precise results (i.e. narrower 95% confidence intervals) than the 33 × 6 and 67 × 3 design for most child-level indicators. Exceptions are indicators of immunization and vitamin A capsule supplementation coverage which show a high intra-cluster correlation. Although the 33 × 6 and 67 × 3 designs provide wider confidence intervals than the 30 × 30 design for child anthropometric indicators, the 33 × 6 and 67 × 3 designs provide the opportunity to conduct a LQAS hypothesis test to detect whether or not a critical threshold of global acute malnutrition prevalence has been exceeded, whereas the 30 × 30 design does not. For the household-level indicators tested in this study, the 67 × 3 design provides the most precise results. However, our results show that neither the 33 × 6 nor the 67 × 3 design are appropriate for assessing indicators of mortality. In this field application, data collection for the 33 × 6 and 67 × 3 designs required substantially less time and cost than that required for the 30 × 30 design. The findings of this study suggest the 33 × 6 and 67 × 3 designs can provide useful time- and resource-saving alternatives to the 30 × 30 method of data collection in emergency settings.</p>
url http://www.ete-online.com/content/5/1/6
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