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MEPS Annual Methodology Report 2023Deliverable Number: 121bE.102 Authors Submitted to: Submitted by: Table of ContentsIntroduction IntroductionThe Household Component of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS-HC; Contract 290- 2016-00004I, awarded July 1, 2016, and Contract 75Q80120D00024, awarded July 13, 2020) is the central component of the long-term research effort sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to provide timely and accurate data on access to, use of, and payments for healthcare services by the U.S. civilian noninstitutionalized population. The project has been in operation since 1996, each year producing a series of annual estimates of health insurance coverage, healthcare utilization, and healthcare expenditures. This report documents the principal design, training, data collection, and data processing activities of the MEPS-HC for survey year 2023. Data are collected for the MEPS-HC through a series of overlapping household Panels. Each year a new Panel is enrolled for a series of five in-person interviews conducted over a 2.5-year period. This report describes work performed for all of the Panels active during calendar year 2023. Data collection operations in 2023 were for Panel 24, Round 9; Panel 26, Round 5; Panel 27, Rounds 3 and 4; and Panel 28, Rounds 1 and 2. Data processing activity focused on delivery of full-year utilization and expenditure files for calendar year 2021. The report touches lightly on procedures and operations that remained unchanged from prior years, focusing primarily on the results of the 2023 operations and features of the project that were new, changed, or enhanced for 2023. Tables in the body of the text highlight the 2023 results, with limited comparison to prior years. A set of tables showing data collection results over the history of the project is included in the appendix. Chapter 1 of the report describes the 2023 sample and activities associated with preparing the sample for fielding. Chapters 2 through 5 discuss activities associated with the data collection for 2023: updates to the survey questionnaire and field procedures; field staff recruiting and training; data collection operations and results; and home office support of field activities. Chapter 6 describes data processing and data delivery activities. 1. SampleEach year, a new, nationally representative sample for the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Household Component (MEPS-HC) is drawn from among households responding to the previous year’s National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). Households in a new Panel typically participate in a series of five interviews that collect data covering two full calendar years. For each calendar year, the sample respondents from two Panels—one completing its first year in the study (Round 3) and one completing its second year (Round 5)—are combined for analysis purposes, resulting in a series of annual estimation files. Beginning in 2020, with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, and continuing through 2022, there were concerns of declining response rates as well as challenges in recruiting respondents by telephone. To help maintain the ongoing sample, Panel 23 was extended for a third year of data collection in 2020 and a fourth year in 2021, and Panel 24 was extended for a third year in 2021 and fourth year in 2022. The sample for the new MEPS Panel in 2023, Panel 28, was selected from among households responding to the NHIS in the preceding year, where the NHIS sample was based on the NHIS sample design initially implemented in 2016 (as were Panels 22-27). Specifically, the MEPS household sample was randomly selected from among those that participated in the NHIS during the first three quarters of 2022 and who had been assigned to NHIS Panels 1 and 3, the NHIS Panels designated for MEPS. This chapter describes the 2023 MEPS sample drawn from 2022 NHIS-responding households as well as steps taken to prepare the new sample for fielding. 1.1 Sample CompositionTable 1-1 shows the starting sample sizes in terms of the number of reporting units (RUs) for all MEPS Panels through Panel 28 and the number of MEPS primary sampling units (PSUs) from which each Panel was drawn. Note that the change in the number of PSUs for Panel 12 reflects the redesign of the NHIS sample implemented in 2006 (thus affecting MEPS in 2007), following the 2000 Decennial Census. The number of PSUs for Panel 28 is based on the number of PSUs associated with MEPS after the 2016 NHIS sample redesign, the seventh such MEPS Panel under this design. The reduction in the number of PSUs after Panel 22 stemmed from further modifications to the NHIS design. The MEPS sample units presented are RUs, each of which represents a set of related persons living together within the same NHIS-responding household selected for MEPS participation. Related members of the NHIS households sampled for MEPS who move as a unit during the MEPS data collection period (as well as separate individuals) form new RUs for interviewing purposes. Each new RU is followed over the course of the five MEPS data collection Rounds and interviewed at their new address.
* RUs: reporting units; PSUs: primary sampling units MEPS data collection is conducted in two main fielding periods each year. Typically, during the January-June period, Round 1 of the new Panel and Rounds 3 and 5 of the two continuing Panels are fielded, with the Panel in Round 5 retiring at midyear. Normally, during the July-December period, Round 2 of the new Panel and Round 4 of the remaining continuing Panel are fielded. However, with the extension of Panels 23 and 24 beginning in 2020, additional Rounds were fielded: In 2023, we fielded Round 9 for Panel 24, the last of the extension Panel Rounds. Table 1-2 summarizes the combined workload for the January-June and July-December periods from spring 2019 through fall 2023. Over the years shown in Table 1-2, the combined spring and fall workload has ranged from a low of 28,566 in 2023 to a high of 40,168 in 2021. Typically, the interviewing workload during the spring field period, when three Panels are active, is substantially larger than during the fall, when there are only two. In 2023, there were four active Panels in the spring field period and two in the fall field periods. The spring field period still had more cases, with 18,155 cases fielded, while the fall workload had 10,411 RUs, the lowest of the 5 years shown.
* RU-level sample size for this table was derived from field management system counts and operational reports detailing the fielded sample. Each new MEPS Panel includes some oversampling of population groups of particular analytic interest. Since 2010 (Panel 15), the set of sample domains has included oversamples of Asian, Black, and Hispanic populations. All households set aside in the NHIS for MEPS that have at least one household member in any of these three categories (Asian, Black, or Hispanic) are included in the MEPS sample with certainty. “White and other race” households have been partitioned into two sample domains and subsampled at varying rates across the years. These domains reflect whether an NHIS-responding household characterized as “White or other race” provided “complete” information at the household level for the NHIS or if only “partially complete” information was provided. As background, the partitioning of the “White, other” domain into these two domains began in 2011 (Panel 16). The partial completes were sampled at a lower rate than the full completes in order to lessen the impact on the field effort resulting from the difficulty of gaining the cooperation of these households. The last two columns in Table 1-3 show the subsampling rates for the two groups since Panel 16. The partial completes in the “White, other” domain have been subsampled at rates ranging from a low of 40 percent (Panel 17) to a high of 80 percent (Panel 27). Table 1-4 shows the Panel 28 sample distribution by domain.
* The figures in the second column of the table are the proportion of partial completes in the total delivered sample, after subsampling. The figures in the third and fourth columns are subsampling rates applied to the two “White, other” subdomains in Panels 16 through 28. **Note that Panel 26 rates were left blank due to subsampling being done by size of state rather than race/ethnicity domain.
1.2 Sample Delivery and ProcessingThe 2023 MEPS sample was received from AHRQ and the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) in two deliveries. The first delivery, containing households sampled from the first and second quarter of the 2022 NHIS, was received on September 14, 2022. Households selected from the third quarter of the NHIS were delivered on December 2, 2022. The September delivery of the first majority of the new sample is instrumental to the project’s schedule for launching interviewing each year in early January. The partial file gives insight into the demographic and geographic distribution of the households in the new Panel. This information, when combined with information on older Panels continuing in the new year, guides project decisions on the number and location of new interviewers to recruit. Upon receipt of the first portion of the 2023 sample, project staff also reviewed the NHIS sample file formats to identify any new variables or values and to make any necessary changes to the project programs that use the sample file information. Following this initial review, staff proceeded with the standard processing through which the NHIS households are reconfigured to conform to MEPS reporting unit definitions and prepared the files needed for advance mailouts and interviewer assignments. The early sample delivery also allows time for checking and updating NHIS addresses to improve the quality of the initial mailouts and to identify households that have moved since the NHIS interview. 2. Instrument and Materials Design2.1 IntroductionEach year, the project makes numerous changes to the instrument used to collect MEPS-HC data, as well as to the field procedures followed by the interviewers who collect the data. The notable changes made for 2023 are detailed in this chapter. 2.2 Changes to the Computer-Assisted Personal Interviewing (CAPI) Instrument for 2023The MEPS-HC CAPI instrument was modernized as part of a technology upgrade launched in spring 2018. For each data collection cycle since then, AHRQ and Westat have worked together to define a set of modifications to the CAPI instrument. Some modifications are new items or new sections, whereas others are updates or fixes to existing items. Section-specific changes for the 2023 data collection period, both spring and fall, are summarized below. Start/Restart (ST). While the MEPS informed consent process was previously handled outside of CAPI, recent changes in materials and procedures meant it was best to incorporate this at the beginning of the instrument to ensure it was consistently administered. A new item was added in the ST section to ensure that interviewers present the informed consent information to any new respondent. This item has an accompanying show card that matches the informed consent handout. Reenumeration (RE). The interviewer instruction “IF NOT OBVIOUS, ASK:” was removed from all items collecting sex in the Reenumeration and Off-Path sections. The removal of the interviewer instruction promotes inclusivity and ensures consistent administration. Provider Lookup. Two notable changes were made to the provider lookup based on analysis conducted as part of the recent National Provider Identifier (NPI) contract line item number (CLIN). First, the set of potential providers preloaded into the lookup for a specific household is now smaller and tailored based on urbanicity. Previously, all providers within 100 miles of a household were included. Now, the maximum distance varies based on urbanicity, according to rural-urban commuting area (RUCA) code defined by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. For example, if the household is in a large city or metropolitan area, the lookup includes providers within 55 miles. For an RU in a rural area, the lookup includes providers within 90 miles. Reducing the maximum distance means that fewer unlikely providers will be displayed in the lookup search results. This should make the search process more efficient. Second, a new facility checkbox feature was added to the provider lookup. If this box is checked, only facility-providers display in the search results. If this box is unchecked, both facility-providers and person-providers display in the search results (as was the prior convention). When the provider lookup is launched for HS (Hospital Stay), ER (Emergency Room), and OP (Outpatient) events, the facility box will be checked by default because the provider for these event types should be a facility. The ability to filter out person-providers should help interviewers find a matching hospital or facility entry more quickly and easily. It should also reduce the selection of the wrong provider type for certain event types, which triggers a hard check and requires searching the lookup again. Pharmacy Lookup. The pharmacy lookup was updated to include mail-order and specialty pharmacies across every lookup, regardless of the household’s ZIP Code. The lookup was also expanded to include mail-order pharmacies associated with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) or TRICARE, such as Express Scripts, VA Mail Order Pharmacy, and Meds by Mail. The inclusion of these mail-order pharmacies negates the need for the interviewer to manually enter these pharmacies. This may improve the Medical Provider Component (MPC) match rate for these newly added pharmacies. Finally, the pharmacy lookup was modified in the same way as the provider lookup (described above) with regards to a tailored approach based on a household’s urbanicity. Condition Lookup. A few minor changes were made to the condition lookup. For those entries directly selected from the condition pick list, the List ID is now saved along with the text of the selected entry for analytic purposes. Additionally, the hard check that is used to prevent adding duplicates of the same conditions to the roster was modified to only check the first 30 characters of the text string since that is the maximum length for existing condition entries. The condition lookup was also updated with a small number of additional entries. Prescribed Medicine Lookup. Two minor behind-the-scenes changes were made to the prescribed medicine lookup for analytic purposes. As with the condition lookup, for those entries directly selected from the pick list, the List ID is now saved along with the text of the selected entry. Additionally, when entries are “edited” within the prescribed medicine lookup, a flag is now saved to indicate this. The edit functionality is only available from the prescribed medicine lookup, not any of the other MEPS CAPI lookups. The prescribed medicine lookup was also updated with several additional entries. Provider Probes (PP). The extended family path was eliminated in the Provider Probes. Now, the initial family path also asks about extended family members by use of fills. These fills use variable question text to ask about each other RU member. Additionally, there was a change to an item that asked if extended-family RU members without events reported let the respondent know about their healthcare. This item was revised so that it is also asked of family RU members besides the respondent (for those with no events reported). A minor revision was also made when there are multiple RU members with different reference period end dates. The PP question wording was previously using the earliest end date for any RU member, but it now uses the latest end date for any RU member. Displaying the latest end date ensures that the respondent is considering the broadest reference period possible and does not inadvertently miss reporting any events. Other Medical Expenses (OM). In cross-round interviews where an RU member has Other Medical Expenses, two follow-up questions are asked to determine if the expenses occurred in Year 1 of the cross-round (OM60) or Year 2 of the cross-round (OM70). A soft check was added to OM70 to prevent the illogical recording of “No” to both items. Charge/Payment (CP). The item collecting amount paid out of pocket (CP200) was reworded in response to audiorecordings of the interactions between interviewers and respondents. The item previously asked, how much of the total charge did anyone in the family pay “out of pocket,” that is, before any reimbursements? The phrase “that is, before any reimbursements” was omitted from the question text to help increase understanding for respondents. COVID-19 (CV) and Related Items. The CV section (which was added to the CAPI instrument in 2021) was removed for 2023. The two remaining items from this section regarding COVID-19 vaccinations were moved to the Additional Healthcare (AH) section. In addition, a new series of COVID-19-related items were added to the Priority Condition Enumeration (PE) section. These items ask if RU members ever had COVID-19 or long COVID symptoms, about the impacts of these symptoms, and when their most recent COVID-19 infection was. Employment (EM) and Related Sections. A minor change was made to modify the routing to the question which asks why an RU member is not working during the interview reference period (EM750) so that more people are asked this question. The question is now asked for everyone who currently reports not working, and is also re-asked in Rounds 3 and 5 for those that continue to be unemployed (except for those that are retired). Health Insurance (HX) and Related Sections. There were numerous changes to the Health Insurance sections for spring 2023. First, all questions related to premiums in Medicaid and some premium-related questions for Government Hospital-Physician (GHP) insurance in the HX and Old Public Related Insurance (PR) sections were removed, since these items were found to be not common for Medicaid and GHP programs. Moreover, Medicare Part B questions (specifically HX340 and HX350) were removed since these items are not being used much for policy-relevant research. Removing these aforementioned items also helps reduce respondent and interviewer burden. Another update for spring 2023 was reducing the number of response options used for some HX questions and their corresponding show cards. Specifically:
Additionally, the response options on these show cards were reordered so more prevalent options are listed first, which is expected to decrease burden. Next, the introductory text at HX190 was removed to make the question more pointed and ensure key language is emphasized. Each year, hundreds of respondents report coverage at HX190 that appears to duplicate coverage already reported in the Employment section. By removing the introductory text, the existing phrase “not counting insurance you already told me about” should be more noticeable to respondents, which will ideally reduce duplicate insurance coverage reporting. The question text at HX190 was also modified to explicitly include dental and vison to encourage responses that include these types of coverage. Finally, new follow-up items were added to expand collection of dental coverage and ensure that stand-alone dental policies are not erroneously missed. This includes HX415 and PR35 to collect information about dental coverage related to Medicare Advantage plans, as well as HX625 and OE135 to collect information about dental coverage for private insurance plans. Contacting Module (CM). The CM60 grid collects an email address and cellphone number for each adult household member. This information can be used by MEPS to send emails and texts to RU members regarding follow-up tasks like DocuSign authorization forms or self-administered questionnaires (SAQs). To ensure that email addresses and cellphone numbers are correctly formatted and valid for contacting (e.g., name@example.com), hard checks and soft checks were added to this grid in spring 2023. Analogous hard and soft checks were also added to CM47 and CM55_01, which is where the email address and cellphone number for proxy respondents are collected. In fall 2023, minor changes were made to the wording of CM60 grid items to tailor the language to better match various situations that are encountered in the field. When updating an email address or cellphone number from what was provided in a prior Round, the question text was simplified. In contrast, when requesting email address or cellphone number information for someone that has not previously provided that information to MEPS, we added a short optional statement that interviewers can use to explain why MEPS collects contact information and how it will be used. Respondent Forms (RF). In response from feedback from interviewers, an interviewer-only screen that summarized requested authorization forms for the household was removed. As the vast majority of authorization forms are no longer completed by paper, interviewers found this screen unnecessary for preparing authorization forms. Another improvement was carrying over any “other names” (e.g., maiden name or other legal name) under which RU members may have records filed for use on authorization forms. The option is always available to update the carried over “other name” if needed. Quality Supplement (QS). Supplemental SAQs are introduced and collected in the QS section of the CAPI instrument. For fall 2023, multiple changes were made to the QS section to accommodate the new multimode SAQ approach that allowed both web and paper response. First, the QS section was moved to later in the CAPI instrument, immediately after RF and before Closing (CL). Since authorization forms collected in the RF section are extremely important to MEPS, we wanted to request those signatures before we introduced the SAQ request. The QS section was also revised so that each RU member that was eligible for the SAQ was assigned to the web or paper mode. The assigned mode was based on availability of email and/or cellphone information for each eligible RU member as collected in the CM section. No significant change in follow-up procedures from prior years was made for RU members assigned to the paper mode. When RU members are assigned to the web mode, the interviewer introduces the web SAQ and provides a physical reminder card with further information. However, all web SAQ invitations and reminders were sent post-interview. For more details about the multimode SAQ procedures, see the next section. Supplements to the CAPI Instrument Table 2-1 shows the supplements for the Rounds administered in calendar year 2023. As mentioned above, the most notable change was the adoption of a multimode (web/paper) approach for the Your Health and Health Opinions SAQ. However, the content of the SAQ was unchanged from prior years; both the web and paper version of the SAQ were estimated to take about 7 minutes to complete. When RU members were assigned to the web mode for the SAQ, they were sent automated invitations and reminders by text and/or email. The first invitation was sent 2 days after the main interview was completed and transmitted to the home office. The web SAQ was hosted at www.MEPSDocs.org/survey. Every invitation and reminder message about the web SAQ included a link to this URL, as well as a unique personal identification number (PIN) the RU member used to log in to their survey.
2.3 Testing of the Questionnaire and Interviewer Management SystemTesting for the spring 2023 (Rounds 1, 3, 5, and 9) instrument was conducted between September and December 2022. Testing for the fall 2023 (Rounds 2 and 4) instrument was conducted between March and June 2023. Since 2018, many of the testing approaches and procedures used for the technical upgrade have been continued or adapted to maintain a comprehensive testing plan that supports the ongoing instrument development schedule. CAPI instrument development and testing included multiple programming/testing iterations that each lasted several weeks. Testing was conducted by a mix of corporate testers, MEPS project staff, and trained programming staff. Project and systems staff performed all testing in close coordination with the design team. For each of the spring and fall instruments, AHRQ received an alpha delivery and conducted its own testing. The following month, AHRQ received a beta delivery and conducted additional testing. The testing ensured that CAPI followed the design as intended and assessed whether the layout of the overall screen for a given question, and across questions, consistently met the requirements designed to minimize measurement error. Feature testing thoroughly tested all new features against specifications including wording, text fills, legal and illegal responses, boundary conditions, and skip patterns. Testers validated every possible variation allowed by the specifications. Both scripted and free-form testing were used throughout the development and testing process. A full suite of scripted test cases was defined by the design staff and analytic leads at Westat and is updated each cycle. These scripted test cases represent approximately 80 percent of the cases fielded, including common paths through the CAPI instrument across all Panel Rounds. The test script suite was executed through alpha and beta for the spring and fall testing cycles. In contrast, free-form testing focused on design changes in the current instrument build and ensured that any reported instrument bugs had been fixed. Free-form testing was also utilized to ensure the stability of the CAPI data model and to evaluate the stored data in new or unusual situations. Testers routinely pushed array limits, used back-up, changed answers, and used break-off and restart cases to challenge performance boundaries. Additional testing components, including enhanced integration testing and ad hoc/free-form testing, were also conducted. The enhanced integration testing allowed project staff to check electronic face sheet information, test the RU Information module and the Interviewer Assignment Sheet (IAS), and make entries into the electronic record of calls and refusal evaluation form. The ad hoc testing component used information derived from actual cases to verify that all management information was brought forward correctly from previous Rounds. Using actual case data also allowed staff to check uncommon paths through the MEPS instrument so that specific changes to the questionnaire could be thoroughly tested. The fall 2023 development cycle also included extensive testing related to multimode SAQs. This included unit and integrated testing of the revised screens and routing in the CAPI instrument and the web version of the SAQ, data entered via web, text and email invitations and reminders, the MEPSDocs website, and receipt procedures, including the use of various devices to access and complete the web surveys. 2.4 Changes to Materials and Procedures for 2023The manuals and the materials for the 2023 field effort were updated as needed to reflect changes to the questionnaire and management systems. Below is a description of the key changes to the materials and procedures. Instructional Manuals The field interviewer procedures manual was updated to address changes in field procedures and updates to the Interviewer Management System (IMS). The separate authorization form manual and Computer-Assisted Video Interviewing (CAVI) Operations Manual that were distributed in 2022 were incorporated into the 2023 field interviewer procedures manual. The manual was available electronically on the MEPS laptop. Hard copies were distributed to new hires only. Electronic Case Materials To help prepare for upcoming interviews, the electronic face sheet in the IMS provides interviewers with information needed to contact their assigned households and familiarize themselves with the composition of the household and relevant details about their prior history with the survey. No changes were made to the face sheet in 2023. The IMS also contains a Payment module to activate the debit card incentive after an interview is completed, an RU Information module for documenting operational information to help the next Round’s interviewer effectively work each case, an RU Contact module for reporting address and telephone number changes identified prior to the CAPI interview, and the IAS, which supports follow-up for authorization forms and SAQs not completed at the time of the interview. No significant changes were made to the IMS in 2023. Interviewers continued to be equipped with iPhones for their MEPS work. When changes were made to the laptop IMS, the iPhone mobile field operating system (mFOS) application generally had corresponding changes to match. To facilitate follow-up efforts for web SAQs, a new SAQ Forms module was added to provide the current status for SAQs. Respondent Materials Annual updates were made to all respondent letters, the monthly planner, self-administered questionnaires, and the Income Job Aid. No significant changes were made to the design or content of other respondent materials. The MEPSDocs.org website continued to be available to respondents to boost cooperation, ease legitimacy or COVID-19 concerns, and offer recordkeeping tools. The MEPSDocs website also has links to the show cards in both English and Spanish. These electronic show cards are accessed by interviewers during CAVI interviews (using Zoom to display the show cards), as well as by respondents during telephone interviews. Finally, the MEPSDocs website also hosted the web SAQ during the fall 2023 field period. 3. Recruiting and Training3.1 Field Interviewer Recruiting for 2023Overview. For spring 2023 data collection, MEPS attempted to recruit approximately 140 new interviewers across two recruiting periods to join the team of approximately 265 interviewers who were active on MEPS at the start of the 2023 data collection (early January). Our goal was to increase the team for spring data collection to about 400 interviewers. To put the recruiting and attrition numbers into perspective, Table 3-1 summarizes the MEPS spring data collection staffing for the period of 2019-2023.
Spring 2021 Supplemental Staffing – *Note that the total of 147 new interviewers includes the 36 interviewers who were not trained until mid-June to shore up fall staffing. Spring 2022 Supplemental Staffing – **Note that the total of 93 new interviewers includes 18 interviewers who were trained mid-May to shore up the spring 2022 data collection staff. Spring 2023 Supplemental Staffing – ***Note that the total of 103 new interviewers includes 37 interviewers who were trained mid-April to shore up the spring 2023 data collection staff. Recruiting Goals. Based on a projected sample size of approximately 22,000 RUs across the four Panels to be fielded for spring 2023 and the likely number of experienced MEPS interviewers available at the end of fall 2022 data collection (about 265), including a MEPS travel team of 6 members, Westat estimated needing to recruit between 120 and 140 new interviewers for the standard staffing model. The goal was to start data collection with approximately 400 interviewers actively working during the spring 2023 data collection period. Westat uses the Field Interviewer Recruitment Module (FIRM) software designed to manage the data collector recruiting process. This system works in conjunction with BrassRing, an online application system used to collect, track, and manage applications for all positions at Westat. The BrassRing system collects applications from both external (new to Westat) and internal (current or former Westat field data collectors) applicants. The main recruiting of new field interviewers for 2023 began in early October 2022 and continued through mid-December 2022. Since MEPS was transitioning back to in-person interviewing, MEPS only recruited for in-person interviewers (both English-speaking and bilingual). In anticipation of difficulties in hiring enough new interviewers during the main recruiting period, MEPS planned and implemented an additional Round of recruiting that began in February and continued through mid-March for an in-person supplemental training in April. Recruiting Outcomes. During the main recruiting period, 84 candidates accepted job offers and 66 were hired. With the addition of these new trainees, the project began 2023 data collection with a total of 331 interviewers. The goal was to add 50 more interviewers during the supplemental recruiting period. Interviewer Attrition during 2023 Data Collection. During the spring data collection, a total of 30 new interviewers and 40 experienced interviewers were lost to attrition. An additional 18 new interviewers and 22 experienced interviewers were lost during the fall Round. Total attrition for the year (see Table 3-4) was 29.7 percent, a rate more in line with the attrition level of 30 percent during the first year of the pandemic when the data collection mode switched from in-person to telephone interviewing. In looking forward to 2024, MEPS will again aim to expand the interviewing staff so that we can begin data collection with close to 400 interviewers. The breakdown of 2023 interviewer attrition is shown in Tables 3-2 (spring), 3-3 (fall), and 3-4 (total).
Table 3-2 shows the overall attrition rate during the spring data collection period from 2019 through 2023. Note that the total spring 2023 attrition rate of 18.9 percent is equivalent to the 2022 attrition rate. The new hire spring attrition rate remains high but has decreased to the level of new hire attrition experienced in spring 2019, the year before the pandemic hit and the data collection mode changed. In 2023, the main new interviewer training was conducted in person for the first time since 2020.
Table 3-3 shows the overall attrition rate during the fall data collection period from 2019 through 2023. Note that the total fall 2023 attrition rate was 13.3 percent, comparable to the fall attrition rate in 2022. However, the fall 2023 rate is still higher than the 8.3 percent rate of fall 2019 and 8.0 percent of fall 2020.
Over the past 5 years, the average annual combined attrition rate (new hires and experienced interviewers) has been 29.8 percent. The average annual attrition rate among new hires has been 48.6 percent and 22.6 percent among experienced interviewers. 3.2 2023 Interviewer TrainingThe overall structure for training new interviewers in 2023 was a departure from the virtual training approach conducted in 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The goals of the 2023 training were to address the challenges associated with the recruitment and retention of field data collectors through several approaches including engagement of new hires between the time of hire and in-person training, the reduction of the length and complexity of training, and additional opportunities for interaction between new hires and existing field data collectors. The 2023 training package reflected a blended training approach that included 5.5 days of in-person training that focused on Rounds 3 and 5 interviewing, preceded by asynchronous and synchronous virtual content; CAVI training as part of in-person training, with post-training follow-up; a post in-person asynchronous training on additional topics; and a 2-day virtual training that focused on Round 1 interviewing. An attrition training with the same components was also conducted in April 2023. Welcome to MEPS Pre-training Activities: This package included a project laptop, phone equipment, and an interactive self-paced workbook with exercises and online modules, including videos and knowledge checks, administered through Westat’s Learning Management System (LMS). The LMS generated regular reports, allowing home office and field management staff to monitor the completion of each trainee’s home study. New hires received their home study package early enough to complete the assignments before the in-person training, but not so early that their introduction to important study concepts and project terminology would degrade before the in-person training. The training added additional practice with the Zoom platform prior to the in-person training. New hires also participated in a pre-classroom virtual Welcome to MEPS session. The goals of the session were to further familiarize the new hires with the Zoom platform in preparation for CAVI interviewing and future virtual sessions for Round 1 content, and to contextualize the MEPS training experience using both training staff and experienced field staff. In-Person Training: For the 5.5 days of project-specific training, each trainee was assigned to one of six training classrooms (3 for the April attrition training) staffed by a primary trainer and a support trainer and one or two classroom runners. The selection of trainers for the 2023 new hire training was based on several criteria, including experience training with the CAPI instrument, overall project knowledge, and prior training experience. Prior to in-person training, all training and support staff received a training on the content, activities, and procedures, roles, responsibilities, and logistics associated with training. The training sessions used a variety of formats for presenting material, including lecture, question-and-answer interactions, written exercises, group discussion of problems and resolutions, and activities in which trainees were required to seek answers by consulting project resource materials. In addition, a full mock interview and “mini” mock interviews and dyad role plays were used throughout the training, and they were central to training on both the mechanics and substance of the CAPI instrument. Mocks are scripted interviews usually led by a classroom trainer who serves as both trainer and “respondent” while trainees take turns as the interviewer. Full mocks present the entire interview from Reenumeration through Closing, while a “mini” mock relies on preloaded data to allow the training to begin at the desired questionnaire section. Dyads paired trainees to conduct an interview with one in the role of interviewer and the other using a script to play the respondent. During dyad sessions, members of the classroom training team circulate to answer questions and/or work with individuals or pairs of trainees as needed. Dyads are an effective tool for reinforcing questionnaire concepts and building interviewer confidence in administering the instrument. They also provide trainers with an opportunity to assess each trainee’s interviewing skills and mastery of the questionnaire application. In order to prepare new hires for CAVI interviewing, CAVI was integrated into the training program. Trainees had the opportunity to practice technical setup and cooperation techniques at in-person training. The in-person training component maintained the emphasis on interviewer behaviors and interviewing techniques that facilitate complete and accurate reporting. Trainers were instructed to reinforce good interviewing behaviors during mock interviews. Good interviewing behaviors include reading questions verbatim, training respondents to use records to aid recall, actively engaging respondents in the use of show cards, and using active listening and probing skills. Trainers called attention to instances in which interviewers demonstrated such behaviors. To enhance trainee awareness of behaviors that affect data quality, dyad scripts included instructions to take a “time-out” at certain items in the interview to highlight relevant data quality issues. Trainees that required remedial practice worked one-on-one with their training team or the floater team, either prior to or after the training day, and were able to provide focused practice based on the needs of the trainee. Sixty-four new hires successfully completed the main training, and 37 successfully completed the attrition training. Bilingual trainees in January received an additional half-day of bilingual training immediately following the completion of regular project training. Trainees completed a Round 3 dyad in Spanish. Additionally, trainees practiced advanced cooperation in Spanish. Five new interviewers successfully completed 2023 in-person bilingual training. Bilingual training for new hires during the attrition training was performed virtually. Eleven new interviewers completed the bilingual attrition training virtually. Post-training Activities: After the successful completion of in-person training, new interviewers completed a post-classroom home study. This component must be successfully completed by the new interviewer before beginning fieldwork. It contained interactive exercises in Basic Field Operation System (BFOS) Secure Messaging (BSM) and CAPI. The home study also included a memo from the field director reviewing their tasks in preparation to interview and provided an “early work period” documentation form to assist them in setting up a work plan with their supervisor and completing tasks in a timely manner. In addition to the home study, field supervisors engaged in additional post-training activities with new hires. New hires sat in on the report call of an experienced field interviewer and also reviewed assigned cases to report the best contact strategy for each to their supervisor. Field managers and field supervisors coordinated and implemented a mentoring/buddy plan that paired new hires with experienced field interviewers. The post-training activities also introduced “on-demand” training modules on special topics. These modules were assigned to all new hires as optional on the Westat LMS. The two topics, NHIS Students and MEPS Students, typically are relevant for a small number of field interviewers. While any new field interviewer could review the material, the goal was to provide targeted training for staff who would encounter these particular situations. After the successful completion of in-person training, new interviewers participated in CAVI practice sessions with Westat staff. This follows the model of the 2022 CAVI interviewing training program. 2-Day Round 1 Virtual Training: Westat presented a 2-day training on Round 1 concepts in late February 2023. Trainees participated in one of three virtual classrooms (2 virtual classrooms in the May attrition training.) Both of the training sessions contained a synchronous virtual session and asynchronous sessions delivered by the LMS. Day 1 of the training focused on the CAPI interview in Round 1, including how to train the MEPS respondent, important concepts in the Reenumeration section, and the differences from later Round interviewing and data quality in the Round 1 CAPI interview. The Day 1 asynchronous assignment contained mini-mock interviews that focused on the Reenumeration, Calendar, Employment, and Health Insurance sections. Day 2 focused on the operational tasks associated with the Round 1 interview, including gaining cooperation in Round 1, practicing approaches at the door, and the tasks associated with locating Round 1 households. The asynchronous content on Day 2 of the training focused on advanced cooperation skills, exercises on the electronic record of calls, and data quality in Round 1. Fifty-seven new hires completed the main Round 1 training, while 35 new hires completed the attrition Round 1 training. 3.2.1 Experienced Interviewer TrainingSpring 2023 Round 1/3/5/9 Home Study. The Round 1/3/5/9 home study in December 2022 followed established formats. The content of the home study focused on new procedures and applications for the Interview Management System (including the Respondent Payment module and the electronic Household Health Care Summary [eHHCS]) and the BFOS. Topics also included follow-up procedures for self-administered questionnaires, the introduction of informed consent within the CAPI instrument, changes to the Provider Probes section, provider lookup, and new COVID-19-related questions. The 3-hour self-paced program contained an instructional memo and knowledge check. In-Person Refresher Training. In 2023, AHRQ decided to forgo in-person refresher training. 3.2.2 Continuing Education for All InterviewersFall 2023 Round 2/4 Home Study. The Round 2/4 home study in July 2023 followed established formats. The 2-hour self-paced program contained an instructional memo, interactive self-paced modules on the LMS about multimode SAQ procedures, example materials, and a quiz. Topics included CAVI best practice reminders, updates to the MEPSDoc website, multimode SAQ collection, and CAPI updates. New interviewers hired in the spring (January and April) were required to complete a mock interview with their supervisor, field manager, or designated senior interviewer before beginning the fall Rounds of data collection. Weekly Newsletter. In 2023, MEPS continued offering its field interviewer newsletter in a weekly format. The newsletter allows for additional training opportunities in a concise format and the ability to deliver content as needed to the field. Topics included CAPI questionnaire information, procedural content, and answers to field interviewer questions. 4. Data CollectionThis chapter describes the MEPS-HC data collection operations and provides selected results for the six Rounds of MEPS-HC interviewing conducted in 2023. Selected comparisons to results of prior years are also presented. Tables showing results for all years of the study are provided in the appendix. 4.1 Data Collection ProceduresMEPS data collection management relies on a set of interrelated systems and procedures designed to accomplish three goals: efficiency, data quality, and cost containment. The systems include the BFOS, which facilitates case management through case assignment, case status and hours reporting, data quality reporting, and interviewer efficiency. Related systems include the computer-assisted recorded interviewing (CARI) system and the Efficiency Analysis through Geospatial Location Evaluation (EAGLE) Global Positioning System (GPS) validation module. The CARI system allows for review of recordings for selected interview items to assist in the assessment of interviewer performance and question assessment. The EAGLE system evaluates the location of an interviewer relative to a respondent’s home and attempts to verify the interviewer was at the residence for the duration of the interview to help validate the interview took place. These tools, along with the implementation of models designed to identify cases with a higher propensity for completion, as well as on-hold procedures designed to prevent the overwork of cases in the field, form a comprehensive framework for the management of MEPS data collection. As in prior years, respondent contact materials provided respondents with the link to the MEPS website (www.meps.ahrq.gov); a toll-free number to Alex Scott, a study representative at Westat; and the link to the Westat website (www.westat.com). Calls received from the Alex Scott line were logged into the call-tracking system, and the appropriate supervisor was notified so that they could take the proper course of action. The advance contact calls to Panel 28, Round 1 households were made by a subset of the experienced MEPS interviewers. Typically, for Round 1 households, interviewers are instructed, with a few exceptions, to make initial contact with the household in person. For later Rounds, interviewers are allowed to make initial contacts to set appointments by telephone, so long as the household had been cooperative in prior Rounds. In 2023, MEPS interviews were conducted in three modes: in-person, CAVI, and limited telephone. Interviewers were given guidance throughout each field period about which modes were appropriate for their cases, and interview modes were closely monitored. CAVI interviews are conducted via Zoom meetings hosted by the interviewer. Both interviewer and respondent are visible and audible to one another and can share images of records, and interviewers can share show card images to allow respondents to select a response. CAVI interviewing started in late spring 2022 but became pervasive, now accounting for over 20 percent of completed interviews. Later Round cases were specifically targeted for CAVI interviews; however, these were permissible for Round 1 cases after initial contact. Interviewers typically offered CAVI when respondents were unwilling to have an interviewer in the respondent’s home. In 2023, authorization forms (AFs) were collected in one of three ways: eSignature, DocuSign, or paper (more detail in Section 4.3) The AF procedures varied based on the interview mode and household contact information provided to MEPS. During in-person interviews, available household members signed on the interviewer’s laptop (eSignature). For household members not available during the in-person interview, or for CAVI or telephone interviews, respondents were sent a link via email or text to sign forms in DocuSign. Paper AFs were still used when requested or for household members unavailable and not eligible for DocuSign due to not providing an email address or cellphone number. The interview follow-up procedures also varied by mode. For CAVI and telephone interviews, any paper AFs and SAQs were mailed by the interviewer shortly after the interview was completed. Pickup of the forms was arranged, or a business reply envelope (BRE) was enclosed for returning the forms directly to the home office. Anytime there were forms requested and not collected during the interview, the interviewer made up to three follow-up calls to ensure DocuSign AFs were signed and/or paper forms were completed and returned. MEPS field managers, field directors, and the task leader for field operations continued to manage the field data collection in collaboration with the field supervisors, reinforcing the importance of balancing data quality with production and cost goals across regions. Field staff referred to this collaborative effort as the “No Region Left Behind” approach. Throughout the year, Westat continued to review data for all respondents reported to have been institutionalized in order to identify any individuals who might have been inappropriately classified and, as a result, treated as out of scope for MEPS data collection. Data Collection Schedule. The sequence for beginning the spring Rounds of data collection, most recently adjusted in 2014, was maintained for the spring Round of 2023. Data collection began with Rounds 5 and 9, followed by Round 3, and then Round 1. For the Round 1 respondents, the later starting date allowed several additional weeks of elapsed time in which respondents could experience healthcare events to report in their Round 1 interview, with these additional events giving them a more realistic understanding of what to expect in the subsequent Rounds of the study. The field period dates for the eight Rounds conducted in 2023 are shown in Table 4-1.
Data Quality (DQ) Monitoring. The MEPS DQ field monitoring system and procedures allowed supervisors and field managers to identify interviewers whose work deviated from quality standards and who might need additional coaching on methods for getting respondents to report their healthcare events more completely. CARI review was further integrated into weekly monitoring activities, with supervisors listening to portions of roughly 1,000 interviews per field period from across all interview modes. These reviews were used to reinforce positive interviewing behaviors and techniques; in addition, listening to CARI gave field supervisors direct exposure to interviewing behaviors that needed to be addressed. In some cases, CARI recording results were such that interviewers were instructed to stop working until they could receive some retraining, including administering a practice interview to their field supervisor. Case Potential Listing. The project continued the use of a model predicting a completed interview from a given case (”propensity to complete”) relative to other pending cases in a region. The model is designed to identify cases with a high likelihood of completion at that point in the field period relative to other pending cases. The model is dynamic and is updated weekly based on the specific conditions for pending cases at that time. The model was tested in 2019 to determine if updates were necessary to better fit the data; however, the existing model remains well-suited to current interview conditions and remains in effect, even for telephone interviews. Information from this model is integrated into the BFOS (the system used for case management), providing propensity to complete as part of a comprehensive view of a case for a given week. Supervisors were to instruct interviewers—in the absence of other field information that would dictate otherwise—to attempt these cases during the next production week. Table 4-2 illustrates the potential categories used to classify cases on a weekly basis to promote field efficiency.
4.2 Data Collection Results: InterviewingTable 4-3 provides an overview of the data collection results for Panels 21 through 28, showing sample sizes, average interviewer hours per completed interview, and response rates. Table 4-4 shows the final response rates a second time, reformatted to facilitate Round-by-Round comparisons across Panels and years. In addition to the main Panel Rounds, both tables display the extended Panel Round data for Panels 23 and 24. Of the data collection Rounds conducted in 2023, the response rates showed a moderate increase from 2022 but still lower than prior to 2020. While response rates have not returned to pre-pandemic levels despite a return to in-person interviews, they have continued to rebound. Hours per complete continue to increase higher than pre-pandemic for Round 1, at 13.7 hours.
*Figures in the table are weighted to reflect results of the interim nonresponse subsampling procedure implemented in the first Round of Panel 16.
Table 4-5 illustrates the mode of data collection for each of the 2023 data collection Rounds. CAVI interviews were offered as the primary mode for Round 5 and Round 9, while telephone was the secondary mode, followed by in-person where necessary. For all other Rounds, the primary mode was in-person with CAVI as the secondary mode followed by telephone.
Components of Response and Nonresponse Table 4-6 summarizes components of nonresponse associated with the Round 1 households by Panel beginning in 2017. Prior to 2020, the components of nonresponse remained relatively stable. Starting in 2020, the “refusal” and “other nonresponse” categories have shown a significant increase. Increases and decreases in the percentage of refusals align closely with corresponding decreases and increases in the completion rate.
Tables 4-7 through 4-14 summarize results for additional aspects of the 2023 data collection. Because Round 1 is the most difficult of all the Rounds, the presentation focuses primarily on Panel 28, Round 1.
Note: Figures shown are based on original NHIS sample and exclude reporting units added to the sample as “splits” and “students.” * 2022 Panel 27, Round 1 original NHIS Sample (N) has been updated. NHIS Completion Status Each year, the MEPS sample includes a number of households classified in the NHIS as “partial completes,” in which the interviewer was able to complete part, but not all, of the full NHIS interview. Given the NHIS redesign implemented in 2018, the partial completes included in the 2022 MEPS sample included some cases that completed only the Roster module of the NHIS. The MEPS experience has been that for many of these NHIS cases, the difficulty experienced by the NHIS interviewer carries over to the MEPS interview—the MEPS response rate for the NHIS partial completes is substantially lower than for the NHIS completes. As noted in Chapter 1, for the 2023 sample, AHRQ repeated the step taken in most years since 2012 of sampling the NHIS partial completes in the “White/other” category at a lower rate than the NHIS completes. The upper portion of Table 4-7 shows the proportion of partial completes in the sample over recent years. Across all domains, there was a significant drop in the proportion of the sample classified as partial complete in 2020 from all previous years shown on the table. Since then, the proportion of partial completes has increased. The proportion in 2023 is comparable to 2022. The lower portion of the table shows the persistent and substantial difference in response rate between these two components of the sample. Prior to 2020, among the cases originally delivered from the NHIS (that is, with new reporting units discovered during the MEPS interviewing excluded from the counts), the response rate for the NHIS partial completes averaged around 13 percentage points fewer than that for the NHIS completes. In 2020, that difference jumped up to 16.7 percentage points, and there is a 19-point difference in 2021. In 2023, the difference is more in line with years prior to 2020, at 15.6 percentage points. Sample Domain Table 4-8 breaks out response information for the NHIS completes and partial completes by sample domain categories for Panel 28. Table 4-8, unlike Table 4-7, does include reporting units added to the sample during Round 1 data collection; it shows the differential in response rates between the NHIS partial completes and full completes persisting across all of the domains. NHIS partial completes responded at a lower rate in all domains. Within the individual domains, the difference between the response rate for the NHIS completes and the NHIS partial completes was greatest for the White/other domain—19.3 percentage points.
Note: Includes reporting units added to sample as “splits” and “students” from original NHIS households, which were given the same ”complete” or “partial complete” designation as the original household. Table 4-9 (shown on the next page) further breaks out response information for Panel 28 by interview mode.
Refusals and Refusal Conversion Table 4-10 summarizes the results of refusal conversion efforts by Panel. The rate of “ever refused” for RUs in Panel 28 was down to 36.8 percent from its highest level in Panel 26.
Tracing and Locating Table 4-11 shows results of locating efforts for households that required tracking during the Round 1 field period by Panel. The percentage of households that required some tracing in 2023 (10.2%) dropped 0.8 percent from 2022 and saw its lowest rate in many years; the final rate of households that were not located after tracing efforts also dropped to 2.5 percent from its highest point in 2021.
Interview Length Table 4-12 shows the mean length (in minutes) for interviews conducted without interruption in a single session in Panels 22 through 28. There were a larger number of telephone interviews in 2020 and 2021 due to the pandemic shutdown. These took longer as interviewers had to read the show cards aloud, thus adding time to the interview. In 2022, interview time was down. The reduction is largely attributable to the introduction of electronic signature and DocuSign for AFs. In most cases, interviewers no longer have the burden of preparing paper AFs for household member signature. In 2023, overall timings continued to drop, approaching pre-pandemic levels.
Table 4-13 shows the mean length (in minutes) by mode for interviews conducted without interruption in a single session. While CAVI interviews tend to be slightly longer, some of this time is accounted for by the equipment setup and procedures necessary to conduct a Zoom interview.
Mean Contact Attempts Per Case Table 4-14 shows mean contact attempts, by mode and NHIS completion status, for all cases in Round 1 of Panels 26 through 28. While overall contact attempts are comparable to 2022, contact attempts for NHIS completes dropped slightly in 2023, while the number of attempts for NHIS partials increased.
* RUs=reporting units; CAVI=computer-assisted video interviewing 4.3 Data Collection Results: Authorization Form Signing RatesDuring the Respondent Forms section of the MEPS CAPI interview, interviewers are prompted to ask respondents to sign the AFs needed to conduct the MPC of MEPS. AFs are requested for each unique person-provider pairing identified during the interview as a source of care for a key member of the household. Medical provider AFs are requested for physicians seen in an office-based setting; for inpatient, outpatient, or emergency room care received in a hospital; for care received from a home health agency; for telehealth; and for certain stays in long-term-care institutions. Pharmacy AFs are requested for each pharmacy from which a household member obtained prescription medicines. There are three modes by which authorization forms can be signed. Respondents who are available at the time of the in-person interview may sign their forms electronically on the interviewer’s laptop. If a respondent is not available or not willing to sign at the time of the in-person interview, or if the interview is being conducted by CAVI or telephone, the respondent may be sent a link via text or email to sign their forms electronically in DocuSign. AFs may be signed on paper if a respondent is not available to sign on the laptop and does not have a cellphone or email for DocuSign, if the respondent requests paper, or if the signer is outside the RU. Table 4-15 shows Round-by-Round signing rates for the medical provider AFs for Panels 21 through 28. Prior to 2022, all authorization forms were paper. Starting with the Rounds fielded in 2022, the rates are shown for each signature mode and combined across all modes. In 2023 for Rounds 3 and 5, there was a drop in overall signature rate. For Panel 26, Round 5, this is due to a higher proportion of DocuSign AFs as compared to Panel 25, Round 5. For Panel 27, Round 3, there is a decrease in the signature rates for both DocuSign and paper AFs as compared to Panel 26, Round 3. The fall Rounds in 2023 saw an increase in the overall signature rate, with the biggest jump being in the signing rate for DocuSign AFs.
Calculation of the Round-by-Round collection rate for the medical provider AFs is based on all forms requested during a Round. For later Rounds (that is, Rounds after Round 1), this includes forms fielded but not signed in an earlier Round (nonresponse) as well as forms that were signed in an earlier Round but rendered obsolete because the person had another health event with the provider after the date on which the original form was signed. Table 4-16 shows signing rates for pharmacy AFs for Panels 21 through 28. Pharmacy AFs are requested starting in Round 2, with follow-up for nonresponse in subsequent Rounds similar to that for medical provider AFs. As with the medical provider authorizations forms, the overall signing rate in the first half of 2023 dropped from the first half of 2022 but increased in the second half of 2023.
4.4 Data Collection Results: Self-Administered Questionnaire (SAQ), Diabetes Care Supplement (DCS), and Collection RatesSAQs are requested from key adult household members in Rounds 2 and 4. Forms that are not collected in Rounds 2 and 4 are requested again in Rounds 3 and 5. In 2023, we introduced multimode collection for SAQs. During the CAPI interview, eligible household members were notified that they would receive a link to complete their SAQ on the web. Paper SAQs were offered only if the household member did not have an email address and/or mobile phone number to which a link to the web SAQ could be sent. Table 4-17 shows the SAQ response rates, including both the Round-specific rates and the combined rates after the follow-up Round was completed. This is shown by survey mode for the SAQs requested in 2023. Response rates continue to decline, despite the multimode approach. In 2024, a new contact protocol for web SAQs and additional paper follow-up for web nonresponse will be implemented in an effort to increase response rates.
In Rounds 3 and 5, key adult household members who have been diagnosed with diabetes were asked to complete a short questionnaire called the DCS. Forms not completed for pickup at the time of the interviewer’s visit were followed up on by telephone in the latter stages of Rounds 3 and 5, but unlike the SAQ, there was no follow-up in the subsequent Round for forms not collected in the Round when first requested. Response rates for the DCS for Panels 20 through 27 are shown in Table 4-18. Completion rates for the DCS showed a modest but relatively steady decline over time. In 2023, the number of DCSs requested continued to decline with a noticeable drop in response rate.
4.5 Quality ControlInterviewer performance was monitored through validation case review using GPS, CARI, and telephone interviews. The purpose of validation was to verify that the correct individual was contacted for the interview and that the interview was conducted according to MEPS-approved procedures. Generally, all completed cases were validated by first examining the GPS data stored and encrypted on the laptop. Then, if the case could not be properly validated due to missing data, or the GPS information could not be verified to show the interviewer at the respondent address or another documented location at the time of the interview, the case was then reviewed in the CARI system. If a case could not be validated in CARI due to poor quality or missing CARI data, the case was referred for telephone validation. All interviews completed in less than 30 minutes were also referred for telephone validation. Finally, for cases assigned to telephone validation, if the household could not be reached, a validation questionnaire was mailed with a return envelope. In both the spring and fall Rounds of 2023, over 98 percent of completed cases were validated. In the spring Rounds, cases were validated using GPS data and by CARI at about the same rate. In the fall Rounds, cases were validated using GPS data at a much higher rate due to a higher proportion of in-person interviews in the fall, as opposed to CAVI or telephone interviews. CAVI and telephone interviews cannot be validated using GPS data. A small percentage (8% in the spring and 4% in the fall) were validated by phone, and less than .5% of cases were validated by mail. The percentage of each interviewer’s completed cases that were validated averaged 85.5% of completed in the spring Rounds and 93% in the fall Rounds. In addition to validating cases, MEPS field supervisors and managers conduct observations as part of a comprehensive mentoring process. Generally, MEPS uses technical solutions in place of in-person observations; however, there are specific needs met by specialized observation. As much as possible, observations are conducted in the early weeks of data collection so that problems can be detected and corrected as quickly as possible, and interviewers are given feedback on ways to improve specific interviewing skills. While CARI offers a high-quality portal for evaluating interviewers on question administration, observations are still a critical tool, particularly of newly hired staff. Compared with the observation process, CARI and other report mechanisms do not allow for assessment of the full range of interviewer skills, including respondent contact, trip planning, gaining cooperation, and interviewer-respondent interactions. In addition, the observer serves as an on-site resource in situations where remedial training is necessary. Observation forms are processed and reviewed at the home office to determine the need for individual and field-wide follow-up on specific skills. 4.6 Security IncidentsTo comply with the requirement of reporting incidents involving loss or theft of hard-copy materials with a respondent’s personally identifiable information (PII) or laptops, field staff continued to use an automated Initial Loss Reporting System (ILRS) to report confirmed incidents. Incidents were entered in the MEPS Help Desk Incident Tracking System, investigated, and were then closed upon resolution. Results were recorded in an annual MEPS PII log. A security incident report was submitted to the Westat Institutional Review Board (IRB) for each confirmed incident. In 2023, there were two confirmed laptop and three confirmed iPhone losses. There was also one reported FedEx loss of laptop, iPhone, and accessories in September that FedEx recovered in October. Over the course of the year, five additional iPhones were reported to the MEPS Help Desk as lost, but were then found by the interviewer. The password-protected laptops were shut down at the time of the loss. Since MEPS laptops are full-disk encrypted, respondent identity was not at risk. The MEPS iPhones are also password-protected. Interviewers were counseled about keeping MEPS equipment secure at all times. 5. Home Office Support of Field ActivitiesThe home office supports the data collection effort in several important ways. This support can be described in two phases: One phase of activity supports the launch of each new Round of data collection; another phase supports the field operation while data collection is in progress. These two phases of activity are described in this chapter. 5.1 Preparation for Field ActivitiesPrior to the start of data collection for each period, interviewers connected remotely to the home office to download the CAPI software update for the upcoming Rounds and received a home study training package to prepare them for interviewing. Field interviewers also received a replenishment of supplies at the start of the Rounds. Advance mailings to all respondent households were prepared and mailed by the home office staff prior to the start of data collection. Addresses were first standardized and sent through the National Change of Address (NCOA) database to obtain the most current addresses for mailing. SAQs requested in fall 2022 that were not completed were included in the advance mailing for Round 3 and Round 5 cases in the spring 2023 advance mailing. Any mail returned as undeliverable was recorded, and the appropriate supervisor was notified. Requests to re-mail the Round 1 advance package to households who reported not receiving it were prepared and mailed by home office staff. Supervisors received a Supervisor Assignment Log, listing all of the cases to be released in their region, for each wave of cases to use to assign cases to their interviewers. They entered the ID of the interviewer assigned to each case and sent the log back to the home office. The logs with assignments were then used to make the electronic assignments in the BFOS. Cases were then available to be picked up upon transmission by the assigned field interviewer on the day data collection began for the Round. 5.2 Support During Data CollectionRespondent Contacts. Respondent contacts are an important component of home office support for the MEPS data collection effort. Printed materials mailed to respondents contain an email address and toll-free telephone number that respondents can use to contact the project representative with questions and requests to make or to cancel interview appointments—respondents also could choose not to participate in the study. Home office staff received and initiated the response to all respondent contacts. They forwarded information received from respondent calls to the field supervisors, who initiated the appropriate follow-up and informed the home office of the results of their follow-up within 24 hours of notification. Table 5-1 shows the number and percentage of RUs that made calls to the respondent hotline in the spring and fall Rounds of 2019-2023. The percentage of households that called the hotline dropped in 2023, with a significant decrease in the fall Rounds.
Table 5-2 shows the number and types of calls received on the respondent hotline during 2022 and 2023. As in prior years, a substantial portion of the Round 1 calls were for refusals. In later Rounds, there are more calls for appointments. Table 5-2. Calls to the respondent information line, 2022 and 2023
Monitoring Production. Home office staff monitored production, cost, and data quality, and provided reports and feedback to field managers and supervisors for review and follow-up. Reports were generated weekly and distributed to AHRQ, showing weekly and cumulative field production data, response rates, and costs. Home Office Support. Refusal letters were generated and mailed by home office staff as requested by the field. Home office staff also responded to supply requests from the field, replenishing interviewer and supervisor stocks of materials as needed. Receipt Control. As interviewers completed cases, they transmitted the data electronically and shipped any hard-copy documents to the home office receipt operation. Interviewers shipped all hard-copy material containing PII via FedEx, which facilitates tracking of late or lost shipments. When preparing a shipment to the home office receipt department, interviewers used the Ship to Receipt module in BFOS to indicate exactly what materials were included in the package and recorded the FedEx tracking number. This information was sent directly to the receipt control system so it was known what materials were expected. For interviews completed by phone or CAVI, and for which pickup of hard-copy documents could not be arranged, interviewers provided a BRE for the respondent to send their documents directly to the home office. AFs signed electronically, either on the laptop or in DocuSign, were uploaded to a secure server to be accessed for receipt. Paper AFs were reviewed by receipt staff, then scanned and uploaded to the secure server. When a problem was found in an AF, the problem was documented and feedback was sent to the field supervisor to review with the interviewer. All self-administered questionnaires, including SAQs/preventive care self-administered questionnaires (PSAQs) and DCSs, were receipted and sent out for TeleForm scanning. Helpdesk Support. The MEPS CAPI Helpdesk continued to provide technical support for field interviewing activities during 2023. Helpdesk staff were available 7 days a week to help field staff resolve CAPI, field management system, transmission, laptop, and iPhone problems. Incoming calls were documented for follow-up, as needed, to resolve individual issues and to identify issues reported by multiple interviewers. The MEPS CAPI Helpdesk coordinated tracking and shipping of all field laptops, field laptop assignments, and laptop and phone repairs. 6. Data Processing and Data DeliveryThis chapter briefly describes the activities that supported Westat’s data delivery work during the year and identifies the principal files related to data year 2021, delivered in 2023. 6.1 Processing to Support Data Delivery6.1.1 Schedules for Data DeliveryAdhering to the schedule for delivery of the key MEPS public-use files is of paramount importance to the project. Throughout 2023, data processing activities to support the major file deliveries for the year proceeded simultaneously along several different delivery paths, with activity focused separately on each of the Panels for the annual full-year files. As in past years, the project used a set of comprehensive data delivery schedules to guide management of the effort. The schedules integrate key dates for the data collection, data capture, coding, editing and imputation, weights construction, and documentation production tasks. These schedules provide a framework for assessing the potential impact of proposed changes at the start of each processing cycle and for coordinating the succession of processes that comprise the delivery effort. 6.1.2 Data Quality Control SystemThe data quality control (DQC) system consists of both a consolidated database that preserves data as returned from the field and a DQC-specific database that shows the current values of data following any required updates. DQC technicians access the data through a secure portal. Technicians review and edit the data using the Blaise database model that is used in the field for data collection. All DQC work occurs at a “case” level. The DQC system automatically creates a unique “issue” for each instance of text entered as a comment and includes the comment category selected by the field interviewer associated with the text entry. As cases are loaded into DQC, each comment and category is checked by a natural language processing (NLP) algorithm that identifies the most likely category. During processing, data technicians have the opportunity to accept or update this category. Technicians then follow standardized procedures for data review and editing based on the comment category. The DQC system also runs a series of programmatic checks and assigns a new “issue” for each instance that triggers a consistency or edit check. These checks are designed to ensure that data changed during editing conform fully to the rules of the CAPI instrument before the data are released. In addition, issues are, on rare occasion, added manually to individual cases by DQC staff from MEPS Help Desk reports, such as when a name or email address is discovered to be misspelled after completion of the interview; these issues are included among the number of cases with at least one interviewer comment. During spring 2023, 11.9 percent of cases received from the field included a comment (Table 6-1). Cases with any issue, a field comment, or a consistency check totaled 31.4 percent in spring 2023. For fall 2023, 11.2 percent of cases received from the field included a comment, while cases with any issue totaled 25.5 percent.
Field interviewers must select 1 of 10 categories for each comment text string. After selecting a category, CAPI provides category-specific guidance on information to include in the comment (e.g., RU member name, event date). They receive training to help identify the most meaningful category and avoid overuse of the category “Other.” Table 6-2 shows the number of comments made in each category as assigned by the NLP algorithm and confirmed by the data technicians.
6.1.3 TransformationTransformation is the process of extracting data from the Blaise data models optimized for data collection and writing them to the data exchange format (Dex) required by the data delivery teams. The transformation has two logical activities: First is transforming the structure of the data from data collection to Dex and then transforming the format of the data from Blaise to Oracle. The resulting data, now stored in Oracle using the Dex structure, serves as input to the analytic editing, variable construction, public-use files (PUFs), and other file deliveries. The goal is to dislocate the delivery activities as little as possible in order to provide data of the highest quality as efficiently as possible. As shown in Figure 6-1, data transformation has four distinct layers. The metadata layer contains all the variable definitions—including names, tables, or segments or blocks—and transformation logic, sometimes known as “plain-language transformation specifications.” The analytic group leads at Westat are typically responsible for the metadata and the transformation logic. Figure 6-1. Blaise to Dex transformation
Note: DEX=data exchange format; DQC=data quality control; PUFs=public-use files Based on the metadata, two specifications are developed. The first describes the Dex structure using a formal schema, which is expressed as a set of SQL statements to create the empty Oracle Dex database. The second specification is the detailed transformation specification. Each variable is assigned to a set of similar variables called a “transformation class.” A unique transformation class is defined by the information needed to specify the transformation. For instance, some variables simply need to be copied to an appropriate location in the Dex. These are known as passthrough variables and belong to the “passthrough” class. “Code All That Apply” variables are transformed based on the value selected by the interviewer, so the specification requires an additional Dex variable for each possible value. “Code All That Apply” is another transformation class. All of the classes are developed through discussions with AHRQ and sent to AHRQ for approval. The third layer is the transformation (or programming) layer. Using the specifications just described, the data are read from the Blaise database in the data collection structure, the transformation logic is applied, and a data file for each Dex table is written. Next, the format is transformed from the Blaise format to Oracle, writing to the single-round database (SRD). The single-round structure is necessary because the data collection instrument does not contain all data for all Rounds for a given case; rather, only the data required to field the case in that specific Round are included. The SRD data are then merged into the existing data, yielding a cumulative multi-round database (MRD). The final layer relates the different databases to selected key deliverables. This layer is intentionally general. For example, while the MRD is the source for the PUF deliveries, there are many additional steps to edit the data, construct variables, and deliver a data file and codebook. 6.1.4 TeleForm/Data Editing of Scanned FormsTeleForm, a commercial off-the-shelf software system for intelligent data capture and image processing, was used in 2023 to capture data collected in the DCS and the SAQ. TeleForm software reads the form image files and extracts data according to the project specifications. Supporting software checks the data for conformity with project specifications and flags data values that violate the validation rules for review and resolution. As SAQs evolve to be multimode (web and paper) in 2023, including follow-up hard-copy-only in spring 2024, we will update this section to discuss data harmonization and web data collection. 6.1.5 CodingCoding refers to the process of converting data items collected in text format to prespecified numeric codes. For the MEPS-HC, five types of information require coding:
Medical Conditions and Prescribed Medicine Coding In 2023, coding was performed on the medical conditions and prescribed medicine text strings reported by household respondents for calendar year 2022. An automated system enabled coders to easily search for and assign the appropriate International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) code (for conditions) or Generic Product Identifier (GPI) code (for medicines). The system supports the verifier’s review of all codes and, as needed, correction of the coder’s initial decision. For the prescribed medicine coding, a pharmacist provided a further review of text strings questioned by the verifier, uncodable text strings, foreign medicines, and compound drugs. All coding actions were tracked in the systems, and error rates were calculated weekly. Both the condition and prescribed medicine coding efforts were staffed by three coders. Medical conditions text strings for data year 2022 were coded to include the greatest specificity indicated by the text string. The fully specified ICD-10 code is needed to accurately match to the Clinical Classification Software Refined (CCSR) diagnosis codes. A total of 2,715 unique strings were manually coded, and the authority table was constructed with AHRQ-approved code assignments. The overall error rate for coders was 1.8 percent, below the contractual error rate goal of 2 percent. Prescription medicine text strings for data year 2022 were coded to the set of GPI codes, associated with the Master Drug Data Base (MDDB) maintained by Medi-Span, a part of Wolters Kluwer. The codes characterize medicines by therapeutic class, form, and dosage. To augment the assignment of codes to less specified and ambiguous text strings, AHRQ developed procedures for assigning partial GPI codes and higher level drug categories that were implemented in 2017 and continued through subsequent coding cycles. AHRQ also developed a set of exact and inexact matching programs to reduce the number of prescribed medicine strings sent for manual coding. Westat’s implementation of these matching programs reduces the number of prescribed medicine text strings sent for manual coding by approximately 50 percent each year. The matching programs are reviewed and approved each year. A total of 2,503 strings were manually coded from the 2022 data year. In a process similar to condition text strings, the prescription medicine text strings undergo two Rounds of deduplication to identify the unique strings to be coded. AHRQ’s exact and inexact matching programs are then run to further reduce the number of strings to be coded. In the spring of 2022, the prescribed medicine pick list and search tool was integrated into the CAPI instrument, which impacted the number of strings that need manually coding in 2023. The overall coding error rate (across all coders) was less than 1 percent, which is lower than the contractual goal of 2 percent. As with conditions, all prescription text strings/codes were reviewed by a verifier, with additional review of selected strings provided by a pharmacist. Source of Payment Coding Source of payment (SOP) information is collected in both the household and the medical provider components. In the HC charge payment section of the CAPI instrument, the names of the sources of payment are collected in three places: when the bill was paid by a source identified in response to a direct question about payment (REIMNAM); when the bill was sent to a source other than the respondent and the respondent names that source (WHOBILL1); and in response to a question about a direct payment source for prescription medicines (SRCNAME). The responses are coded to one of the sources of payment options in which healthcare expenditures are reported in the MEPS PUFs. These payment sources include:
The SOP Coding Guidelines is a manual updated each year before the start of the annual coding cycle, submitted for AHRQ approval, and distributed to the coders. Health insurance show cards and data from the health insurance plan file for CAPI are available to coders as resource materials. Since the MPC of MEPS uses the same set of SOP codes as the Household Component, coding rules and decisions are coordinated with the MPC contractor (RTI) to ensure consistency in the coding. Before the start of the coding cycle, Westat compares RTI’s authority tables with its own to identify any inconsistencies. AHRQ adjudicates any inconsistencies to ensure the authority tables from each contractor are aligned. Each year, the SOP text strings extracted from the reference year data are matched to a historical file of previously coded SOP text strings to create a file of matched strings with suggested or “matched” codes. These match-coded strings are reviewed by coders and verified or modified as needed. This review is required because insurance companies change their product lines and coverage offerings very frequently, and as a result, the SOP code for a given text string (e.g., the name of an insurance company or plan) can change from year to year. For example, from one year to the next an insurer or insurance product may participate in or drop out of state exchanges; may offer Medicare Part D or dental or vision insurance, or may drop it; may add Medicare Advantage plans in addition to Medicaid health maintenance organizations (HMO)s; or may gain or lose state contracts as Medicaid service providers. As a result of these changes, the appropriate code for a company or specific plan may also change from year to year. Strings that do not match to a string in the history table are researched and have an appropriate SOP code assigned by coding staff. SOP coding during 2023 was for the payment sources reported for 2022 events. For cases when the bill was paid by a source identified in response to a direct question about payment (REIMNAM), a total of 1,746 previously coded sources of payment text strings were reviewed and updated as needed. After deduplication of the strings reported for 2022, coders reviewed and coded 1,718 strings. If the bill was sent to a source other than the respondent and the respondent names that source (WHOBILL1), coders reviewed and coded 2,997 strings. For text strings reported as direct payers for prescription medicine (SRCNAME), 447 new text strings were reviewed and coded by coders. Industry and Occupation Coding Industry and occupation coding is performed for MEPS by the Census Bureau using the U.S. Census Bureau’s Demographic Surveys Division’s computer-assisted industry and occupation (I&O) codes, which can be cross-walked to the 2007 North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS) and the 2010 Standard Occupational Classifications (SOC) system. The codes characterize the jobs reported by household respondents and are released annually on the full-year (FY) JOBS file. During 2023, 11,282 jobs were coded for the 2022 JOBS file. Geographic Coding The Westat Geographic Information Systems (GIS) division geocodes household addresses, assigning the latitude and longitude coordinates as well as other variables such as county and state Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) codes, Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) status, Designated Market Area, Census Place, and county. RU-level data are expanded to the person level and delivered to AHRQ as part of the set of “master files” sent yearly. These data are not included in a PUF, but some variables are used for the FY weights processing. During the calendar year 2023 coding cycle, 16,168 unique address records for full-year reporting units were processed. 6.2 Data DeliveryThe primary objective of MEPS is to produce a series of data files for public release each calendar year. The inter-round processing, editing, and variable construction tasks all serve to prepare these PUFs. Each file addresses one or more aspects of the U.S. civilian noninstitutional population’s access to, use of, and payments for healthcare. The Oracle system has a separate database for each data year. The MEPS 2023 database contains Panels 27 and 28. After the data are in the Oracle delivery database, each analytical team performs basic edit checks on the data to begin the process. These edits ensure the data conform to the CAPI instrument’s flow as well as to AHRQ’s analytical needs. These edits can be run in SAS, using SAS datasets extracted from the delivery database, or in SQL, directly on the delivery database. Problems identified through the basic edits process may require updates to the data. If updating is required, these updates may be accomplished in one of two ways:
Once all the edits have been completed for an analytical team, and quality control (QC) frequencies and univariates have been approved, notification is sent to all other analytical teams so that work can be coordinated in those areas. 6.2.1 Variable ConstructionAnalytical groups at AHRQ work with Westat analysts to define the variables of interest for inclusion on the PUF and other key data deliveries. Variables are named according to standard naming conventions, and once the list is approved, descriptive specifications are written to define each variable and to provide detailed information for programming. Specifications are written at two levels. The high-level specification is a descriptive specification intended to document the concept of the variable and provide high-level information regarding the variable construction requirements. The detailed-level specifications contain the details required to develop programming code for building the variables. Specifications are written and sent to AHRQ for approval. Once approval is received for the specification, program development can proceed for that variable. Specifications guide programming development, and once programs have been written, code reviewers compare newly developed code against specifications to identify problems in either code or specifications. This program development process includes a number of steps and checkpoints to ensure that all new programs meet all specification requirements:
This model is followed for the development of all new programs required for data delivery. For mature programs that are reused in subsequent deliveries with only minor modifications, the process is appropriately streamlined to ensure both accuracy and efficiency on all programs. 6.2.2 File DeliveriesPublic-Use File Deliveries The principal files delivered during calendar year 2023 are listed below:
Ancillary File Deliveries In addition to the principal data files delivered for public release each year, the project also produces a number of ancillary files for delivery to AHRQ. These include an extensive series of person- and family-level weights, “raw” data files reflecting MEPS data at intermediate stages of capture and editing, and files generated at the end of each Round or as needed to support analysis of both substantive and methodological topics. A comprehensive list of the files delivered during 2023 appears in the appendix. Medical Provider Component (MPC) Files During each year’s processing cycle, Westat also creates files for the MPC contractor and, in turn, receives data files back from the MPC. As in prior years, Westat provided sample files for the MPC in three waves, with the first two waves delivered while HC data collection was still in progress. In preparing the sample files to be delivered in 2023 for MPC collection of data about 2022 health events, Westat again deduplicated the sample of providers. This process, developed in consultation with AHRQ, was designed to reduce the number of duplicate providers reported from the household data collection. Early in 2023, following completion of MPC data collection and processing for 2021 events, Westat received the files containing data collected in the MPC with linkages to matching events collected in the MPC with events collected in the HC. In processing at Westat, matched events from the MPC served as the primary source for imputing expenditure variables for the 2021 events. A similar file of prescribed medicines was also delivered to support matching and imputation of expenditures for the prescribed medicines at AHRQ. Timely and well-coordinated data handoffs between Westat and the MPC are critical to the timely delivery of the full-year expenditure files. With each additional year of interaction and cooperation, the handoffs between the MPC and HC have gone more and more smoothly. Appendix A
|
Data collection period | RU-level sample size* |
---|---|
January-June 1996 | 10,799 |
Panel 1 Round 1 | 10,799 |
July-December 1996 | 9,485 |
Panel 1 Round 2 | 9,485 |
January-June 1997 | 15,689 |
Panel 1 Round 3 | 9,228 |
Panel 2 Round 1 | 6,461 |
July-December 1997 | 14,657 |
Panel 1 Round 4 | 9,019 |
Panel 2 Round 2 | 5,638 |
January-June 1998 | 19,269 |
Panel 1 Round 5 | 8,477 |
Panel 2 Round 3 | 5,382 |
Panel 3 Round 1 | 5,410 |
July-December 1998 | 9,871 |
Panel 2 Round 4 | 5,290 |
Panel 3 Round 2 | 4,581 |
January-June 1999 | 17,612 |
Panel 2 Round 5 | 5,127 |
Panel 3 Round 3 | 5,382 |
Panel 4 Round 1 | 7,103 |
July-December 1999 | 10,161 |
Panel 3 Round 4 | 4,243 |
Panel 4 Round 2 | 5,918 |
January-June 2000 | 15,447 |
Panel 3 Round 5 | 4,183 |
Panel 4 Round 3 | 5,731 |
Panel 5 Round 1 | 5,533 |
July-December 2000 | 10,222 |
Panel 4 Round 4 | 5,567 |
Panel 5 Round 2 | 4,655 |
January-June 2001 | 21,069 |
Panel 4 Round 5 | 5,547 |
Panel 5 Round 3 | 4,496 |
Panel 6 Round 1 | 11,026 |
July-December 2001 | 13,777 |
Panel 5 Round 4 | 4,426 |
Panel 6 Round 2 | 9,351 |
January-June 2002 | 21,915 |
Panel 5 Round 5 | 4,393 |
Panel 6 Round 3 | 9,183 |
Panel 7 Round 1 | 8,339 |
July-December 2002 | 15,968 |
Panel 6 Round 4 | 8,977 |
Panel 7 Round 2 | 6,991 |
January-June 2003 | 24,315 |
Panel 6 Round 5 | 8,830 |
Panel 7 Round 3 | 6,779 |
Panel 8 Round 1 | 8,706 |
July-December 2003 | 13,814 |
Panel 7, Round 4 | 6,655 |
Panel 8, Round 2 | 7,159 |
January-June 2004 | 22,552 |
Panel 7 Round 5 | 6,578 |
Panel 8 Round 3 | 7,035 |
Panel 9 Round 1 | 8,939 |
July-December 2004 | 14,068 |
Panel 8, Round 4 | 6,878 |
Panel 9, Round 2 | 7,190 |
January-June 2005 | 22,548 |
Panel 8 Round 5 | 6,795 |
Panel 9 Round 3 | 7,005 |
Panel 10 Round 1 | 8,748 |
July-December 2005 | 13,991 |
Panel 9, Round 4 | 6,843 |
Panel 10, Round 2 | 7,148 |
January-June 2006 | 23,278 |
Panel 9 Round 5 | 6,703 |
Panel 10 Round 3 | 6,921 |
Panel 11 Round 1 | 9,654 |
July-December 2006 | 14,280 |
Panel 10 Round 4 | 6,708 |
Panel 11 Round 2 | 7,572 |
January-June 2007 | 21,326 |
Panel 10 Round 5 | 6,596 |
Panel 11 Round 3 | 7,263 |
Panel 12 Round 1 | 7,467 |
July-December 2007 | 12,906 |
Panel 11 Round 4 | 7,005 |
Panel 12 Round 2 | 5,901 |
January-June 2008 | 22,414 |
Panel 11 Round 5 | 6,895 |
Panel 12 Round 3 | 5,580 |
Panel 13 Round 1 | 9,939 |
July-December 2008 | 13,384 |
Panel 12 Round 4 | 5,376 |
Panel 13 Round 2 | 8,008 |
January-June 2009 | 22,960 |
Panel 12 Round 5 | 5,261 |
Panel 13 Round 3 | 7,800 |
Panel 14 Round 1 | 9,899 |
July-December 2009 | 15,339 |
Panel 13 Round 4 | 7,670 |
Panel 14 Round 2 | 7,669 |
January-June 2010 | 23,770 |
Panel 13 Round 5 | 7,576 |
Panel 14 Round 3 | 7,226 |
Panel 15 Round 1 | 8,968 |
July-December 2010 | 13,785 |
Panel 14 Round 4 | 6,974 |
Panel 15 Round 2 | 6,811 |
January-June 2011 | 23,693 |
Panel 14 Round 5 | 6,845 |
Panel 15 Round 3 | 6,431 |
Panel 16 Round 1 | 10,417 |
July-December 2011 | 14,802 |
Panel 15 Round 4 | 6,254 |
Panel 16 Round 2 | 8,548 |
January-June 2012 | 24,247 |
Panel 15 Round 5 | 6,156 |
Panel 16 Round 3 | 8,160 |
Panel 17 Round 1 | 9,931 |
July-December 2012 | 16,161 |
Panel 16 Round 4 | 8,048 |
Panel 17 Round 2 | 8,113 |
January-June 2013 | 25,788 |
Panel 16 Round 5 | 7,969 |
Panel 17 Round 3 | 7,869 |
Panel 18 Round 1 | 9,950 |
July-December 2013 | 15,347 |
Panel 17 Round 4 | 7,656 |
Panel 18 Round 2 | 7,691 |
January-June 2014 | 24,857 |
Panel 17 Round 5 | 7,485 |
Panel 18 Round 3 | 7,402 |
Panel 19 Round 1 | 9,970 |
July-December 2014 | 14,665 |
Panel 18 Round 4 | 7,203 |
Panel 19 Round 2 | 7,462 |
January-June 2015 | 25,185 |
Panel 18 Round 5 | 7,163 |
Panel 19 Round 3 | 7,168 |
Panel 20 Round 1 | 10,854 |
July-December 2015 | 15,247 |
Panel 19 Round 4 | 6,946 |
Panel 20 Round 2 | 8,301 |
January-June 2016 | 24,694 |
Panel 19 Round 5 | 6,856 |
Panel 20 Round 3 | 7,987 |
Panel 21 Round 1 | 9,851 |
July-December 2016 | 15,390 |
Panel 20 Round 4 | 7,729 |
Panel 21 Round 2 | 7,661 |
January-June 2017 | 24,774 |
Panel 20 Round 5 | 7,611 |
Panel 21 Round 3 | 7,327 |
Panel 22 Round 1 | 9,835 |
July-December 2017 | 14,396 |
Panel 21 Round 4 | 7,025 |
Panel 22 Round 2 | 7,370 |
January-June 2018 | 223,573 |
Panel 21 Round 5 | 6,842 |
Panel 22 Round 3 | 6,892 |
Panel 23 Round 1 | 9,839 |
July-December 2018 | 13,766 |
Panel 22 Round 4 | 6,726 |
Panel 23 Round 2 | 7,040 |
January-June 2019 | 23,261 |
Panel 22 Round 5 | 6,624 |
Panel 23 Round 3 | 6,773 |
Panel 24 Round 1 | 9,864 |
July-December 2019 | 13,403 |
Panel 23 Round 4 | 6,569 |
Panel 24 Round 2 | 6,8348 |
January-June 2020 | 22,667 |
Panel 23 Round 5 | 6,413 |
Panel 24 Round 3 | 6,382 |
Panel 25 Round 1 | 9,872 |
July-December 2020 | 15,633 |
Panel 23 Round 6 | 5,264 |
Panel 24 Round 4 | 5,574 |
Panel 25 Round 2 | 4,795 |
January-June 2021 | 23,340 |
Panel 23 Round 7 | 4,624 |
Panel 24 Round 5 | 4,879 |
Panel 25 Round 3 | 4,328 |
Panel 26 Round 1 | 9,509 |
July-December 2021 | 16,828 |
Panel 23 Round 8 | 4,093 |
Panel 24 Round 6 | 4,048 |
Panel 25 Round 4 | 3,768 |
Panel 26 Round 2 | 4,919 |
January-June 2022 | 24,465 |
Panel 23 Round 9 | 3,673 |
Panel 24 Round 7 | 3,573 |
Panel 25 Round 5 | 3,339 |
Panel 26 Round 3 | 4,180 |
Panel 27 Round 1 | 9,700 |
July-December 2022 | 12,491 |
Panel 24 Round 8 | 3,174 |
Panel 26 Round 4 | 3,866 |
Panel 27 Round 2 | 5,451 |
January-June 2023 | |
Panel 24 Round 9 | 3,019 |
Panel 26 Round 5 | 3,585 |
Panel 27 Round 3 | 4,882 |
Panel 28 Round 1 | 6,669 |
July-December 2023 | |
Panel 27 Round 4 | 4,564 |
Panel 28 Round 2 | 5,847 |
* RU-level sample size for this table derived from the field management system counts and operational reports detailing the fielded sample.
Panel/Round | Original sample | Split cases (movers) | Student cases | Out-of-scope cases | Net sample | Completes | Average interviewer hours/ complete | Response rate (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Panel 1 | Round 1 | 10,799 | 675 | 125 | 165 | 11,434 | 9,496 | 10.4 | 83.1 |
Round 2 | 9,485 | 310 | 74 | 101 | 9,768 | 9,239 | 8.7 | 94.6 | |
Round 3 | 9,228 | 250 | 28 | 78 | 9,428 | 9,031 | 8.6 | 95.8 | |
Round 4 | 9,019 | 261 | 33 | 89 | 9,224 | 8,487 | 8.5 | 92.0 | |
Round 5 | 8,477 | 80 | 5 | 66 | 8,496 | 8,369 | 6.5 | 98.5 | |
Panel 2 | Round 1 | 6,461 | 431 | 71 | 151 | 6,812 | 5,660 | 12.9 | 83.1 |
Round 2 | 5,638 | 204 | 27 | 54 | 5,815 | 5,395 | 9.1 | 92.8 | |
Round 3 | 5,382 | 166 | 15 | 52 | 5,511 | 5,296 | 8.5 | 96.1 | |
Round 4 | 5,290 | 105 | 27 | 65 | 5,357 | 5,129 | 8.3 | 95.7 | |
Round 5 | 5,127 | 38 | 2 | 56 | 5,111 | 5,049 | 6.7 | 98.8 | |
Panel 3 | Round 1 | 5,410 | 349 | 44 | 200 | 5,603 | 4,599 | 12.7 | 82.1 |
Round 2 | 4,581 | 106 | 25 | 39 | 4,673 | 4,388 | 8.3 | 93.9 | |
Round 3 | 4,382 | 102 | 4 | 42 | 4,446 | 4,249 | 7.3 | 95.5 | |
Round 4 | 4,243 | 86 | 17 | 33 | 4,313 | 4,184 | 6.7 | 97.0 | |
Round 5 | 4,183 | 23 | 1 | 26 | 4,181 | 4,114 | 5.6 | 98.4 | |
Panel 4 | Round 1 | 7,103 | 371 | 64 | 134 | 7,404 | 5,948 | 10.9 | 80.3 |
Round 2 | 5,918 | 197 | 47 | 40 | 6,122 | 5,737 | 7.2 | 93.7 | |
Round 3 | 5,731 | 145 | 10 | 39 | 5,847 | 5,574 | 6.9 | 95.3 | |
Round 4 | 5,567 | 133 | 35 | 39 | 5,696 | 5,540 | 6.8 | 97.3 | |
Round 5 | 5,547 | 52 | 4 | 47 | 5,556 | 5,500 | 6.0 | 99.0 | |
Panel 5 | Round 1 | 5,533 | 258 | 62 | 103 | 5,750 | 4,670 | 11.1 | 81.2 |
Round 2 | 4,655 | 119 | 27 | 27 | 4,774 | 4,510 | 7.7 | 94.5 | |
Round 3 | 4,496 | 108 | 17 | 24 | 4,597 | 4,437 | 7.2 | 96.5 | |
Round 4 | 4,426 | 117 | 20 | 41 | 4,522 | 4,396 | 7.0 | 97.2 | |
Round 5 | 4,393 | 47 | 12 | 32 | 4,420 | 4,357 | 5.5 | 98.6 | |
Panel 6 | Round 1 | 11,026 | 595 | 135 | 200 | 11,556 | 9,382 | 10.8 | 81.2 |
Round 2 | 9,351 | 316 | 49 | 50 | 9,666 | 9,222 | 7.2 | 95.4 | |
Round 3 | 9,183 | 215 | 23 | 41 | 9,380 | 9,001 | 6.5 | 96.0 | |
Round 4 | 8,977 | 174 | 32 | 66 | 9,117 | 8,843 | 6.6 | 97.0 | |
Round 5 | 8,830 | 94 | 14 | 46 | 8,892 | 8,781 | 5.6 | 98.8 | |
Panel 7 | Round 1 | 8,339 | 417 | 76 | 122 | 8,710 | 7,008 | 10.0 | 80.5 |
Round 2 | 6,991 | 190 | 40 | 24 | 7,197 | 6,802 | 7.2 | 94.5 | |
Round 3 | 6,779 | 169 | 21 | 32 | 6,937 | 6,673 | 6.5 | 96.2 | |
Round 4 | 6,655 | 133 | 17 | 34 | 6,771 | 6,593 | 7.0 | 97.4 | |
Round 5 | 6,578 | 79 | 11 | 39 | 6,629 | 6,529 | 5.7 | 98.5 | |
Panel 8 | Round 1 | 8,706 | 441 | 73 | 175 | 9,045 | 7,177 | 10.0 | 79.3 |
Round 2 | 7,159 | 218 | 52 | 36 | 7,393 | 7,049 | 7.2 | 95.4 | |
Round 3 | 7,035 | 150 | 13 | 33 | 7,165 | 6,892 | 6.5 | 96.2 | |
Round 4 | 6,878 | 149 | 27 | 53 | 7,001 | 6,799 | 7.3 | 97.1 | |
Round 5 | 6,795 | 71 | 8 | 41 | 6,833 | 6,726 | 6.0 | 98.4 | |
Panel 9 | Round 1 | 8,939 | 417 | 73 | 179 | 9,250 | 7,205 | 10.5 | 77.9 |
Round 2 | 7,190 | 237 | 40 | 40 | 7,427 | 7,027 | 7.7 | 94.6 | |
Round 3 | 7,005 | 189 | 24 | 31 | 7,187 | 6,861 | 7.1 | 95.5 | |
Round 4 | 6,843 | 142 | 23 | 44 | 6,964 | 6,716 | 7.4 | 96.5 | |
Round 5 | 6,703 | 60 | 8 | 43 | 6,728 | 6,627 | 6.1 | 98.5 | |
Panel 10 | Round 1 | 8,748 | 430 | 77 | 169 | 9,086 | 7,175 | 11.0 | 79.0 |
Round 2 | 7,148 | 219 | 36 | 22 | 7,381 | 6,940 | 7.8 | 94.0 | |
Round 3 | 6,921 | 156 | 10 | 31 | 7,056 | 6,727 | 6.8 | 95.3 | |
Round 4 | 6,708 | 155 | 13 | 34 | 6,842 | 6,590 | 7.3 | 96.3 | |
Round 5 | 6,596 | 55 | 9 | 38 | 6,622 | 6,461 | 6.2 | 97.6 | |
Panel 11 | Round 1 | 9,654 | 399 | 81 | 162 | 9,972 | 7,585 | 11.5 | 76.1 |
Round 2 | 7,572 | 244 | 42 | 24 | 7,834 | 7,276 | 7.8 | 92.9 | |
Round 3 | 7,263 | 170 | 15 | 25 | 7,423 | 7,007 | 6.9 | 94.4 | |
Round 4 | 7,005 | 139 | 14 | 36 | 7,122 | 6,898 | 7.2 | 96.9 | |
Round 5 | 6,895 | 51 | 7 | 44 | 6,905 | 6,781 | 5.5 | 98.2 | |
Panel 12 | Round 1 | 7,467 | 331 | 86 | 172 | 7,712 | 5,901 | 14.2 | 76.5 |
Round 2 | 5,901 | 157 | 27 | 27 | 6,058 | 5,584 | 9.1 | 92.2 | |
Round 3 | 5,580 | 105 | 13 | 12 | 5,686 | 5,383 | 8.1 | 94.7 | |
Round 4 | 5,376 | 102 | 12 | 16 | 5,474 | 5,267 | 8.8 | 96.2 | |
Round 5 | 5,261 | 50 | 8 | 21 | 5,298 | 5,182 | 6.4 | 97.8 | |
Panel 13 | Round 1 | 9,939 | 502 | 97 | 213 | 10,325 | 8,017 | 12.2 | 77.6 |
Round 2 | 8,008 | 220 | 47 | 23 | 8,252 | 7,809 | 9.0 | 94.6 | |
Round 3 | 7,802 | 204 | 14 | 38 | 7,982 | 7,684 | 7.2 | 96.2 | |
Round 4 | 7,670 | 162 | 17 | 40 | 7,809 | 7,576 | 7.5 | 97.0 | |
Round 5 | 7,576 | 70 | 15 | 38 | 7,623 | 7,461 | 6.1 | 97.9 | |
Panel 14 | Round 1 | 9,899 | 394 | 74 | 140 | 10,227 | 7,650 | 12.3 | 74.8 |
Round 2 | 7,669 | 212 | 29 | 27 | 7,883 | 7,239 | 8.3 | 91.8 | |
Round 3 | 7,226 | 144 | 23 | 34 | 7,359 | 6,980 | 7.3 | 94.9 | |
Round 4 | 6,974 | 112 | 23 | 30 | 7,079 | 6,853 | 7.7 | 96.8 | |
Round 5 | 6,845 | 55 | 9 | 30 | 6,879 | 6,761 | 6.2 | 98.3 | |
Panel 15 | Round 1 | 8,968 | 374 | 73 | 157 | 9,258 | 6,802 | 13.2 | 73.5 |
Round 2 | 6,811 | 171 | 19 | 21 | 6,980 | 6,435 | 8.9 | 92.2 | |
Round 3 | 6,431 | 134 | 23 | 22 | 6,566 | 6,261 | 7.2 | 95.4 | |
Round 4 | 6,254 | 116 | 15 | 26 | 6,359 | 6,165 | 7.8 | 97.0 | |
Round 5 | 6,156 | 50 | 5 | 19 | 6,192 | 6,078 | 6.0 | 98.2 | |
Panel 16 | Round 1 | 10,417 | 504 | 98 | 555 | 10,940 | 8,553 | 11.4 | 78.2 |
Round 2 | 8,353 | 248 | 40 | 32 | 8,821 | 8,351 | 7.6 | 94.7 | |
Round 3 | 8,160 | 223 | 19 | 27 | 8,375 | 8,236 | 6.4 | 96.1 | |
Round 4 | 8,048 | 151 | 16 | 13 | 8,390 | 8,162 | 6.6 | 97.3 | |
Round 5 | 7,969 | 66 | 13 | 25 | 8,198 | 7,998 | 5.5 | 97.6 | |
Panel 17 | Round 1 | 9,931 | 490 | 92 | 127 | 10,386 | 8,121 | 11.7 | 78.2 |
Round 2 | 8,113 | 230 | 35 | 19 | 8,359 | 7,874 | 7.9 | 94.2 | |
Round 3 | 7,869 | 180 | 15 | 15 | 8,049 | 7,663 | 6.3 | 95.2 | |
Round 4 | 7,656 | 199 | 19 | 30 | 7,844 | 7,494 | 7.4 | 95.5 | |
Round 5 | 7,485 | 87 | 10 | 23 | 7,559 | 7,445 | 6.1 | 98.5 | |
Panel 18 | Round 1 | 9,950 | 435 | 83 | 111 | 10,357 | 7,683 | 12.3 | 74.2 |
Round 2 | 7,691 | 264 | 32 | 16 | 7,971 | 7,402 | 9.2 | 92.9 | |
Round 3 | 7,402 | 235 | 21 | 22 | 7,635 | 7,213 | 7.6 | 94.5 | |
Round 4 | 7,203 | 189 | 14 | 22 | 7,384 | 7,172 | 7.5 | 97.1 | |
Round 5 | 7,163 | 94 | 12 | 15 | 7,254 | 7,138 | 6.2 | 98.4 | |
Panel 19 | Round 1 | 9,970 | 492 | 70 | 115 | 10,417 | 7,475 | 13.5 | 71.8 |
Round 2 | 7,460 | 222 | 23 | 24 | 7,681 | 7,188 | 8.4 | 93.6 | |
Round 3 | 7,168 | 187 | 12 | 17 | 7,350 | 6,962 | 7.0 | 94.7 | |
Round 4 | 6,946 | 146 | 20 | 23 | 7,089 | 6,858 | 7.4 | 96.7 | |
Round 5 | 6,856 | 75 | 7 | 24 | 6,914 | 6,794 | 5.9 | 98.3 | |
Panel 20 | Round 1 | 10,854 | 496 | 85 | 117 | 11,318 | 8,318 | 12.5 | 73.5 |
Round 2 | 8,301 | 243 | 39 | 22 | 8,561 | 7,998 | 8.3 | 93.4 | |
Round 3 | 7,987 | 173 | 17 | 26 | 8,151 | 7,753 | 6.8 | 95.1 | |
Round 4 | 7,729 | 161 | 19 | 31 | 7,878 | 7,622 | 7.2 | 96.8 | |
Round 5 | 7,611 | 99 | 13 | 23 | 7,700 | 7,421 | 6.0 | 96.4 | |
Panel 21 | Round 1 | 9,851 | 462 | 92 | 89 | 10,316 | 7,674 | 12.6 | 74.4 |
Round 2 | 7,661 | 207 | 32 | 17 | 7,883 | 7,327 | 8.5 | 93.0 | |
Round 3 | 7,327 | 166 | 14 | 19 | 7,488 | 7,043 | 7.2 | 94.1 | |
Round 4 | 7,025 | 119 | 14 | 20 | 7,138 | 6,907 | 7.0 | 96.8 | |
Round 5 | 6,914 | 42 | 8 | 34 | 6,930 | 6,778 | 5.9 | 97.8 | |
Panel 22 | Round 1 | 9,835 | 352 | 68 | 86 | 10,169 | 7,381 | 12.8 | 72.6 |
Round 2 | 7,371 | 166 | 19 | 11 | 7,545 | 7,039 | 8.5 | 93.3 | |
Round 3 | 7,071 | 100 | 12 | 19 | 7,164 | 6,808 | 6.7 | 95.0 | |
Round 4 | 6,815 | 91 | 13 | 18 | 6,901 | 6,672 | 6.8 | 96.7 | |
Round 5 | 6,670 | 35 | 7 | 12 | 6,700 | 6,584 | 5.3 | 98.3 | |
Panel 23 | Round 1 | 9,960 | 1,931 | 46 | 110 | 10,089 | 7,351 | 12.5 | 72.9 |
Round 2 | 7,387 | 106 | 14 | 15 | 7,492 | 6,960 | 8.2 | 92.9 | |
Round 3 | 6,987 | 102 | 11 | 18 | 7,082 | 6,703 | 6.1 | 94.6 | |
Round 4 | 6,704 | 74 | 10 | 12 | 6,776 | 6,522 | 6.6 | 96.2 | |
Round 5 | 6,503 | 34 | 4 | 5 | 6,536 | 6,383 | 5.3 | 97.7 | |
Round 6 | 6,498 | 90 | 10 | 18 | 6,480 | 5,120 | 4.8 | 79.0 | |
Round 7 | 5,176 | 36 | 5 | 6 | 5,170 | 4,513 | 5.2 | 87.3 | |
Round 8 | 4,558 | 27 | 3 | 10 | 4,548 | 3,984 | 5.8 | 87.6 | |
Round 9 | 4,006 | 10 | 4 | 10 | 3,996 | 3,603 | 4.7 | 90.2 | |
Panel 24 | Round 1 | 9,976 | 153 | 43 | 82 | 10,090 | 7,186 | 11.8 | 71.2 |
Round 2 | 7,211 | 98 | 19 | 5 | 7,323 | 6,777 | 7.9 | 92.5 | |
Round 3 | 6,812 | 76 | 9 | 7 | 6,890 | 6,289 | 6.0 | 91.3 | |
Round 4 | 6,335 | 44 | 4 | 13 | 6,370 | 5,446 | 5.1 | 85.5 | |
Round 5 | 5,510 | 31 | 4 | 15 | 5,495 | 4,770 | 5.3 | 86.8 | |
Round 6 | 4,816 | 22 | 8 | 8 | 4,808 | 3,959 | 5.7 | 82.3 | |
Round 7 | 4,007 | 28 | 0 | 5 | 4,002 | 3,500 | 5.3 | 87.5 | |
Round 8 | 3,528 | 14 | 0 | 9 | 3,519 | 3,121 | 5.9 | 88.7 | |
Round 9 | 3,135 | 11 | 1 | 6 | 3,129 | 2,988 | 4.5 | 95.5 | |
Panel 25 | Round 1 | 10,008 | 184 | 38 | 78 | 10,152 | 6,265 | 10.8 | 61.7 |
Round 2 | 5,907 | 49 | 14 | 12 | 5,958 | 4,677 | 5.5 | 78.5 | |
Round 3 | 5,191 | 38 | 5 | 2 | 5,189 | 4,230 | 6.1 | 81.5 | |
Round 4 | 4,314 | 40 | 10 | 7 | 4,307 | 3,685 | 7.3 | 85.6 | |
Round 5 | 3,712 | 11 | 5 | 6 | 3,706 | 3,278 | 5.3 | 88.4 | |
Panel 26 | Round 1 | 9,674 | 160 | 29 | 68 | 9,795 | 5,882 | 11.1 | 60.1 |
Round 2 | 6,047 | 83 | 11 | 2 | 6,045 | 4,799 | 9.0 | 79.4 | |
Round 3 | 4,882 | 42 | 4 | 6 | 4,876 | 4,103 | 6.8 | 84.1 | |
Round 4 | 4,165 | 30 | 11 | 4 | 4,161 | 3,805 | 7.6 | 94.4 | |
Round 5 | |||||||||
Panel 27 | Round 1 | 10,085 | 193 | 28 | 78 | 10,007 | 6,158 | 13.2 | 61.5 |
Round 2 | 6,288 | 68 | 11 | 3 | 6,285 | 5,368 | 8.9 | 85.4 | |
Round 3 | 5,434 | 37 | 6 | 5 | 5,429 | 4,818 | 7.1 | 88.8 | |
Round 4 | 4,880 | 40 | 3 | 12 | 4,868 | 4,509 | 7.3 | 92.6 | |
Round 5 | |||||||||
Panel 28 | Round 1 | 10,110 | 175 | 19 | 75 | 10,035 | 6,527 | 13.7 | 65.0 |
Round 2 | 6,640 | 62 | 7 | 5 | 6,635 | 5,766 | 8.7 | 86.9 | |
Round 3 | |||||||||
Round 4 | |||||||||
Round 5 |
* Figures in the table are weighted to reflect results of the interim nonresponse subsampling procedure implemented in the first Round of Panel 16.
Year/Panel | Round 1 | Round 2 | Round 3 | Round 4 | Round 5 | Round 6 | Round 7 | Round 8 | Round 9 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | |||||||||
Panel 15 | 73.5 | 92.2 | |||||||
Panel 14 | 94.9 | 96.8 | |||||||
Panel 13 | 97.9 | ||||||||
2011 | |||||||||
Panel 16 | 78.2 | 94.8 | |||||||
Panel 15 | 95.4 | 97.0 | |||||||
Panel 14 | 98.3 | ||||||||
2012 | |||||||||
Panel 17 | 78.2 | 94.2 | |||||||
Panel 16 | 96.1 | 97.3 | |||||||
Panel 15 | 98.2 | ||||||||
2013 | |||||||||
Panel 18 | 74.2 | 92.9 | |||||||
Panel 17 | 95.2 | 95.5 | |||||||
Panel 16 | 97.6 | ||||||||
2014 | |||||||||
Panel 19 | 71.8 | 93.6 | |||||||
Panel 18 | 94.5 | 97.1 | |||||||
Panel 17 | 98.5 | ||||||||
2015 | |||||||||
Panel 20 | 73.5 | 93.4 | |||||||
Panel 19 | 94.7 | 96.7 | |||||||
Panel 18 | 98.4 | ||||||||
2016 | |||||||||
Panel 21 | 74.4 | 93.0 | |||||||
Panel 20 | 95.1 | 96.8 | |||||||
Panel 19 | 98.3 | ||||||||
2017 | |||||||||
Panel 22 | 72.6 | 93.3 | |||||||
Panel 21 | 94.1 | 96.8 | |||||||
Panel 20 | 96.4 | ||||||||
2018 | |||||||||
Panel 23 | 72.9 | 92.9 | |||||||
Panel 22 | 95.0 | 96.7 | |||||||
Panel 21 | 97.8 | ||||||||
2019 | |||||||||
Panel 24 | 71.2 | 92.5 | |||||||
Panel 23 | 94.6 | 96.2 | |||||||
Panel 22 | 98.3 | ||||||||
2020 | |||||||||
Panel 25 | 61.7 | 78.5 | |||||||
Panel 24 | 91.3 | 85.5 | |||||||
Panel 23 | 97.7 | 79.0 | |||||||
2021 | |||||||||
Panel 26 | 60.1 | 79.4 | |||||||
Panel 25 | 81.5 | 85.6 | |||||||
Panel 24 | 86.8 | 82.3 | |||||||
Panel 23 | 87.3 | 87.6 | |||||||
2022 | |||||||||
Panel 27 | 61.5 | 85.4 | |||||||
Panel 26 | 84.1 | 91.4 | |||||||
Panel 25 | 88.6 | ||||||||
Panel 24 | 87.5 | 88.7 | |||||||
Panel 23 | 90.2 | ||||||||
2023 | |||||||||
Panel 28 | 65.0 | 86.9 | |||||||
Panel 27 | 88.8 | 92.6 | |||||||
Panel 26 | 93.0 | ||||||||
Panel 24 | 95.5 |
Response and nonresponse components | 2014 P19R1 |
2015 P20R1 |
2016 P21R1 |
2017 P22R1 |
2018 P23R1 |
2019 P24R1 |
2020 P25R1 |
2021 P26R1 |
2022 P27R1 |
2023 P28R1 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total sample | 10,532 | 11,435 | 10,405 | 10,255 | 10,199 | 10,172 | 10,230 | 9,863 | 10,085 | 10,035 |
Out of scope (%) | 1.1 | 1.0 | 0.9 | 0.8 | 1.1 | 0.8 | 0.8 | 0.7 | 0.8 | 0.7 |
Complete (%) | 71.8 | 73.5 | 74.4 | 72.6 | 72.1 | 70.6 | 61.2 | 59.6 | 61.1 | 65.0 |
Nonresponse (%) | 28.2 | 26.5 | 25.6 | 27.4 | 26.9 | 28.6 | 38.0 | 39.7 | 38.2 | 34.9 |
Refusal (%) | 22.4 | 21.0 | 20.2 | 21.8 | 22.1 | 24.0 | 28.7 | 31.2 | 30.4 | 29.9 |
Not located (%) | 4.2 | 4.3 | 3.7 | 3.9 | 3.1 | 3.1 | 3.2 | 4.3 | 3.3 | 2.6 |
Other nonresponse (%) | 1.6 | 1.2 | 1.7 | 1.7 | 1.7 | 1.5 | 6.1 | 4.2 | 4.5 | 2.5 |
NHIS completion status | 2014 P19R1 |
2015 P20R1 |
2016 P21R1 |
2017 P22R1 |
2018 P23R1 |
2019 P24R1 |
2020 P25R1 |
2021 P26R1 |
2022 P27R1 |
2023 P28R1 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Original NHIS sample (N) | 9,970 | 10,854 | 9,851 | 9,835 | 9,839 | 9,864 | 9,866 | 9,509 | 9,700 | 9,800 |
Percentage complete in NHIS | 81.9 | 80.6 | 77.6 | 81.0 | 80.4 | 84.2 | 89.3 | 85.3 | 83.3 | 85.0 |
Percentage partial complete in NHIS | 18.1 | 19.4 | 22.4 | 19.0 | 19.6 | 15.8 | 10.7 | 14.7 | 16.7 | 15.0 |
MEPS Round 1 response rate: | ||||||||||
Percentage complete for NHIS completes | 74.5 | 75.9 | 77.3 | 75.4 | 75.4 | 73.5 | 63.5 | 63.1 | 64.2 | 67.5 |
Percentage complete for NHIS partial completes | 58.9 | 63.1 | 64.8 | 62.0 | 63.6 | 60.3 | 46.8 | 44.1 | 49.5 | 51.9 |
Note: Figures shown are based on original NHIS sample and exclude reporting units added to the sample as “splits” and “students.”
Panel | Net sample (N) | Ever refused (%) | Converted (%) | Final refusal rate (%) | Final response rate (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Panel 15 | 9,258 | 29.4 | 26.6 | 21.0 | 73.5 |
Panel 16 | 10,940 | 26.3 | 30.9 | 17.6 | 78.2 |
Panel 17 | 10,386 | 25.3 | 30.2 | 17.2 | 78.2 |
Panel 18 | 10,357 | 25.5 | 25.0 | 18.1 | 74.2 |
Panel 19 | 10,418 | 30.1 | 23.3 | 22.4 | 71.8 |
Panel 20 | 11,318 | 30.1 | 29.2 | 21.0 | 73.5 |
Panel 21 | 10,316 | 29.1 | 29.0 | 20.2 | 74.4 |
Panel 22 | 10,169 | 30.1 | 27.6 | 21.8 | 72.6 |
Panel 23 | 10,089 | 31.3 | 25.6 | 22.4 | 72.9 |
Panel 24 | 10,090 | 32.6 | 23.4 | 24.2 | 71.2 |
Panel 25 | 10,152 | 34.8 | 12.3 | 28.9 | 61.7 |
Panel 26 | 9,795 | 40.4 | 19.3 | 31.4 | 60.0 |
Panel 27 | 10,007 | 37.7 | 14.8 | 30.6 | 61.5 |
Panel 28 | 10,035 | 36.8 | 16.4 | 29.9 | 65.0 |
Panel | Total sample (N) | Ever traced (%) | Not located (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Panel 15 | 9,415 | 16.7 | 4.1 |
Panel 16 | 11,019 | 18.2 | 3.0 |
Panel 17 | 10,513 | 18.7 | 3.6 |
Panel 18 | 10,468 | 16.0 | 4.3 |
Panel 19 | 10,532 | 19.5 | 4.1 |
Panel 20 | 11,435 | 14.0 | 4.3 |
Panel 21 | 10,405 | 12.8 | 3.7 |
Panel 22 | 10,228 | 13.0 | 3.9 |
Panel 23 | 10,199 | 12.7 | 3.0 |
Panel 24 | 10,172 | 12.6 | 3.0 |
Panel 25 | 10,230 | 11.7 | 3.2 |
Panel 26 | 9,863 | 11.3 | 4.3 |
Panel 27 | 10,085 | 11.0 | 3.3 |
Panel 28 | 10,110 | 10.2 | 2.5 |
Round | Panel 17 | Panel 18 | Panel 19 | Panel 20 | Panel 21 | Panel 22 | Panel 23 | Panel 24 | Panel 25 | Panel 26 | Panel 27 | Panel 28 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | 67.8 | 78.0 | 85.5 | 76.4 | 75.5 | 79.9 | 78.1 | 79.5 | 89.0 | 92.9 | 82.3 | 80.6 |
Round 2 | 90.2 | 102.9 | 92.3 | 86.3 | 85.3 | 88.8 | 88.2 | 87.0 | 89.7 | 93.3 | 79.3 | 79.6 |
Round 3 | 94.3 | 103.1 | 94.5 | 89.7 | 93.4 | 93.0 | 92.6 | 98.5 | 100.0 | 76.5 | ||
Round 4 | 99.6 | 89.0 | 84.6 | 80.5 | 82.7 | 84.3 | 86.8 | 86.2 | 93.2 | |||
Round 5 | 92.2 | 87.4 | 84.1 | 85.3 | 76.0 | 78.8 | 78.7 | 97.1 | 75.5 | |||
Round 6 | 88.4 | 89.7 | ||||||||||
Round 7 | 96.6 | 85.4 | ||||||||||
Round 8 | 90.1 | 78.5 | ||||||||||
Round 9 | 76.5 |
Contact type | Panel 21, Round 1 | Panel 22, Round 1 | Panel 23, Round 1 | Panel 24, Round 1 | Panel 25, Round 1 | Panel 26, Round 1 | Panel 27, Round 1 | Panel 28, Round 1 | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
All RUs | Complete | Partial | All RUs | Complete | Partial | All RUs | Complete | Partial | All RUs | Complete | Partial | All RUs | Complete | Partial | All RUs | Complete | Partial | All RUs | Complete | Partial | All RUs | Complete | Partial | |
N | 9,851 | 7,645 | 2,206 | 9,835 | 7,963 | 1,872 | 9,839 | 7,913 | 1,926 | 9,864 | 8,306 | 1,558 | 9,866 | 8,814 | 1,052 | 9,509 | 8,113 | 1,396 | 9,700 | 8,077 | 1,623 | 9,800 | 8,326 | 1,474 |
% of all RUs | 100 | 77.6 | 22.4 | 100 | 81.0 | 19.0 | 100 | 80.4 | 19.6 | 100 | 84.2 | 15.8 | 100 | 89.3 | 10.7 | 100 | 85.3 | 14.7 | 100 | 83.3 | 16.7 | 100 | 81.0 | 19.0 |
In-person | 7.0 | 6.9 | 8.3 | 6.3 | 6.1 | 7.3 | 6.2 | 6.0 | 7.2 | 5.5 | 5.4 | 6.3 | 2.6 | 2.5 | 2.6 | 2.4 | 2.3 | 3.1 | 5.6 | 6.1 | 5.7 | 7.2 | 6.9 | 8.5 |
Telephone | 2.0 | 1.9 | 2.4 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.7 | 1.5 | 1.4 | 1.7 | 1.3 | 1.2 | 1.6 | 9.7 | 9.5 | 11.6 | 8.8 | 8.7 | 9.8 | 8.7 | 8.7 | 9.4 | 2.1 | 2.0 | 2.5 |
CAVI | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 10.6 | 10.6 | 11.3 | 0.9 | 0.8 | 1.1 |
Total | 9.3 | 8.9 | 11.0 | 8.4 | 8.1 | 9.6 | 8.2 | 7.9 | 9.5 | 7.3 | 7.1 | 8.5 | 14.4 | 14.1 | 17.0 | 13.1 | 12.8 | 14.9 | 8.4 | 8.2 | 9.3 | 8.4 | 8.1 | 10.3 |
Panel/round | Signature method | Authorization forms requested | Authorization forms signed | Signing rate (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Panel 1 | Round 1 | 3,562 | 2,624 | 73.7 | |
Round 2 | 19,874 | 14,145 | 71.2 | ||
Round 3 | 17,722 | 12,062 | 68.1 | ||
Round 4 | 17,133 | 10,542 | 61.5 | ||
Round 5 | 12,544 | 6,763 | 53.9 | ||
Panel 2 | Round 1 | 2,735 | 1,788 | 65.4 | |
Round 2 | 13,461 | 9,433 | 70.1 | ||
Round 3 | 11,901 | 7,537 | 63.3 | ||
Round 4 | 11,164 | 6,485 | 58.1 | ||
Round 5 | 8,104 | 4,244 | 52.4 | ||
Panel 3 | Round 1 | 2,078 | 1,349 | 64.9 | |
Round 2 | 10,335 | 6,463 | 62.5 | ||
Round 3 | 8,716 | 4,797 | 55.0 | ||
Round 4 | 8,761 | 4,246 | 48.5 | ||
Round 5 | 6,913 | 2,911 | 42.1 | ||
Panel 4 | Round 1 | 2,400 | 1,607 | 67.0 | |
Round 2 | 12,711 | 8,434 | 66.4 | ||
Round 3 | 11,078 | 6,642 | 60.0 | ||
Round 4 | 11,047 | 6,888 | 62.4 | ||
Round 5 | 8,684 | 5,096 | 58.7 | ||
Panel 5 | Round 1 | 1,243 | 834 | 67.1 | |
Round 2 | 14,008 | 9,618 | 68.7 | ||
Round 3 | 12,869 | 8,301 | 64.5 | ||
Round 4 | 13,464 | 9,170 | 68.1 | ||
Round 5 | 10,888 | 7,025 | 64.5 | ||
Panel 6 | Round 1 | 2,783 | 2,012 | 72.3 | |
Round 2 | 29,861 | 22,872 | 76.6 | ||
Round 3 | 26,068 | 18,219 | 69.9 | ||
Round 4 | 27,146 | 20,082 | 74.0 | ||
Round 5 | 21,022 | 14,581 | 69.4 | ||
Panel 7 | Round 1 | 2,298 | 1,723 | 75.0 | |
Round 2 | 22,302 | 17,557 | 78.7 | ||
Round 3 | 19,312 | 13,896 | 72.0 | ||
Round 4 | 16,934 | 13,725 | 81.1 | ||
Round 5 | 14,577 | 11,099 | 76.1 | ||
Panel 8 | Round 1 | 2,287 | 1,773 | 77.5 | |
Round 2 | 22,533 | 17,802 | 79.0 | ||
Round 3 | 19,530 | 14,064 | 72.0 | ||
Round 4 | 19,718 | 14,599 | 74.0 | ||
Round 5 | 15,856 | 11,106 | 70.0 | ||
Panel 9 | Round 1 | 2,253 | 1,681 | 74.6 | |
Round 2 | 22,668 | 17,522 | 77.3 | ||
Round 3 | 19,601 | 13,672 | 69.8 | ||
Round 4 | 20,147 | 14,527 | 72.1 | ||
Round 5 | 15,963 | 10,720 | 67.2 | ||
Panel 10 | Round 1 | 2,068 | 1,443 | 69.8 | |
Round 2 | 22,582 | 17,090 | 75.7 | ||
Round 3 | 18,967 | 13,396 | 70.6 | ||
Round 4 | 19,087 | 13,296 | 69.7 | ||
Round 5 | 15,787 | 10,476 | 66.4 | ||
Panel 11 | Round 1 | 2,154 | 1,498 | 69.5 | |
Round 2 | 23,957 | 17,742 | 74.1 | ||
Round 3 | 20,756 | 13,400 | 64.6 | ||
Round 4 | 21,260 | 14,808 | 69.7 | ||
Round 5 | 16,793 | 11,482 | 68.4 | ||
Panel 12 | Round 1 | 1,695 | 1,066 | 62.9 | |
Round 2 | 17,787 | 12,524 | 70.4 | ||
Round 3 | 15,291 | 10,006 | 65.4 | ||
Round 4 | 15,692 | 10,717 | 68.3 | ||
Round 5 | 12,780 | 8,367 | 65.5 | ||
Panel 13 | Round 1 | 2,217 | 1,603 | 72.3 | |
Round 2 | 24,357 | 18,566 | 76.2 | ||
Round 3 | 21,058 | 14,826 | 70.4 | ||
Round 4 | 21,673 | 15,632 | 72.1 | ||
Round 5 | 17,158 | 11,779 | 68.7 | ||
Panel 14 | Round 1 | 2,128 | 1,498 | 70.4 | |
Round 2 | 23,138 | 17,739 | 76.7 | ||
Round 3 | 19,024 | 13,673 | 71.9 | ||
Round 4 | 18,532 | 12,824 | 69.2 | ||
Round 5 | 15,444 | 10,201 | 66.1 | ||
Panel 15 | Round 1 | 1,680 | 1,136 | 67.6 | |
Round 2 | 18,506 | 13,628 | 73.6 | ||
Round 3 | 16,686 | 11,652 | 69.8 | ||
Round 4 | 16,260 | 11,139 | 68.5 | ||
Round 5 | 13,443 | 8,420 | 62.6 | ||
Panel 16 | Round 1 | 1,811 | 1,223 | 67.5 | |
Round 2 | 23,718 | 17,566 | 74.1 | ||
Round 3 | 21,780 | 14,828 | 68.1 | ||
Round 4 | 21,537 | 16,329 | 75.8 | ||
Round 5 | 16,688 | 12,028 | 72.1 | ||
Panel 17 | Round 1 | 1,655 | 1,117 | 67.5 | |
Round 2 | 21,749 | 17,694 | 81.4 | ||
Round 3 | 19,292 | 15,125 | 78.4 | ||
Round 4 | 20,086 | 15,691 | 78.1 | ||
Round 5 | 15,064 | 11,873 | 78.8 | ||
Panel 18 | Round 1 | 1,677 | 1,266 | 75.5 | |
Round 2 | 22,714 | 18,043 | 79.4 | ||
Round 3 | 20,728 | 15,827 | 76.4 | ||
Round 4 | 17,092 | 13,704 | 80.2 | ||
Round 5 | 15,448 | 11,796 | 76.4 | ||
Panel 19 | Round 1 | 2,189 | 1,480 | 67.6 | |
Round 2 | 22,671 | 17,190 | 75.8 | ||
Round 3 | 20,582 | 14,534 | 70.6 | ||
Round 4 | 17,102 | 13,254 | 77.5 | ||
Round 5 | 15,330 | 11,425 | 74.5 | ||
Panel 20 | Round 1 | 2,354 | 1,603 | 68.1 | |
Round 2 | 25,334 | 18,479 | 72.9 | ||
Round 3 | 22,851 | 15,862 | 69.4 | ||
Round 4 | 18,234 | 14,026 | 76.9 | ||
Round 5 | 16,274 | 12,100 | 74.4 | ||
Panel 21 | Round 1 | 2,037 | 1,396 | 68.5 | |
Round 2 | 22,984 | 17,295 | 75.2 | ||
Round 3 | 20,802 | 14,898 | 71.6 | ||
Round 4 | 16,487 | 13,110 | 79.5 | ||
Round 5 | 20,443 | 16,247 | 79.5 | ||
Panel 22 | Round 1 | 2,274 | 1,573 | 69.2 | |
Round 2 | 22,913 | 17,530 | 76.5 | ||
Round 3 | 26,436 | 19,496 | 73.7 | ||
Round 4 | 23,249 | 18,097 | 77.8 | ||
Round 5 | 17,171 | 12,168 | 70.9 | ||
Panel 23 | Round 1 | 1,982 | 1,533 | 77.3 | |
Round 2 | 29,576 | 21,850 | 73.9 | ||
Round 3 | 23,365 | 14,475 | 62.4 | ||
Round 4 | 19,220 | 13,483 | 70.2 | ||
Round 5 | 17,569 | 10,903 | 62.1 | ||
Round 6 | 12,701 | 8,002 | 63.0 | ||
Round 7 | 13,254 | 8,108 | 61.2 | ||
Round 8 | 11,589 | 7,624 | 65.8 | ||
Round 9 | eSignature | 597 | 542 | 90.8 | |
DocuSign | 5,867 | 4,528 | 77.2 | ||
Paper | 2,601 | 1,172 | 45.1 | ||
Combined | 9,065 | 6,242 | 68.9 | ||
Panel 24 | Round 1 | 2,285 | 1,306 | 57.2 | |
Round 2 | 24,755 | 15,865 | 64.1 | ||
Round 3 | 22,657 | 11,522 | 50.9 | ||
Round 4 | 14,612 | 7,716 | 52.8 | ||
Round 5 | 15,992 | 8,941 | 55.9 | ||
Round 6 | 11,366 | 6,658 | 58.6 | ||
Round 7 | eSignature | 860 | 799 | 92.9 | |
DocuSign | 6,856 | 4,997 | 72.9 | ||
Paper | 3,032 | 1,254 | 41.4 | ||
Combined | 10,748 | 7,050 | 65.6 | ||
Round 8 | eSignature | 1,121 | 1,055 | 94.1 | |
DocuSign | 4,997 | 3,500 | 70.0 | ||
Paper | 1,625 | 661 | 40.7 | ||
Combined | 7,743 | 5,216 | 67.4 | ||
Round 9 | eSignature | 520 | 497 | 95.6 | |
DocuSign | 4,718 | 3,171 | 67.2 | ||
Paper | 1,946 | 733 | 37.7 | ||
Combined | 7,184 | 4,401 | 61.3 | ||
Panel 25 | Round 1 | 3,110 | 1,242 | 39.9 | |
Round 2 | 15,259 | 7,292 | 47.8 | ||
Round 3 | 15,932 | 8,100 | 50.8 | ||
Round 4 | 11,252 | 7,204 | 64.0 | ||
Round 5 | eSignature | 3,796 | 3,570 | 94.0 | |
DocuSign | 3,336 | 2,339 | 70.1 | ||
Paper | 1,877 | 431 | 23.0 | ||
Combined | 9,009 | 6,340 | 70.4 | ||
Panel 26 | Round 1 | 2,432 | 1,151 | 47.3 | |
Round 2 | 17,765 | 10,564 | 59.5 | ||
Round 3 | eSignature | 7,510 | 7,043 | 93.8 | |
DocuSign | 4,668 | 2,980 | 63.8 | ||
Paper | 2,964 | 419 | 14.1 | ||
Combined | 15,142 | 10,442 | 69.0 | ||
Round 4 | eSignature | 6,494 | 6,295 | 95.4 | |
DocuSign | 2,544 | 1,420 | 55.8 | ||
Paper | 1,351 | 184 | 13.6 | ||
Combined | 10,389 | 7,799 | 75.1 | ||
Round 5 | eSignature | 946 | 893 | 94.4 | |
DocuSign | 6,057 | 4,250 | 70.2 | ||
Paper | 1,827 | 461 | 25.2 | ||
Combined | 8,830 | 5,604 | 63.5 | ||
Panel 27 | Round 1 | eSignature | 1,222 | 1,147 | 93.9 |
DocuSign | 523 | 285 | 54.5 | ||
Paper | 477 | 39 | 8.2 | ||
Combined | 2,222 | 1,471 | 66.2 | ||
Round 2 | eSignature | 10,831 | 10,286 | 95.0 | |
DocuSign | 4,744 | 2,026 | 42.7 | ||
Paper | 2,855 | 192 | 6.7 | ||
Combined | 18,430 | 12,504 | 67.8 | ||
Round 3 | eSignature | 8,199 | 7,648 | 93.3 | |
DocuSign | 4,961 | 2,651 | 53..4 | ||
Paper | 2,941 | 197 | 6..7 | ||
Combined | 16,101 | 10,496 | 56.2 | ||
Round 4 | eSignature | 7,345 | 7,120 | 96.9 | |
DocuSign | 3,378 | 2,296 | 68.0 | ||
Paper | 1,773 | 197 | 11.1 | ||
Combined | 12,496 | 9,613 | 76.9 | ||
Panel 28 | Round 1 | eSignature | 1,539 | 1,451 | 94.3 |
DocuSign | 469 | 241 | 51.4 | ||
Paper | 609 | 22 | 3.6 | ||
Combined | 2,617 | 1,714 | 65.5 | ||
Round 2 | eSignature | 13,940 | 13,318 | 95.5 | |
DocuSign | 3,794 | 2,015 | 53.1 | ||
Paper | 3,442 | 135 | 3.9 | ||
Combined | 21,176 | 15,468 | 73.0 |
Panel/Round | In-person | Telephone | CAVI | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Panel 24 | Round 9 | 75.9 | 69.8 | 77.1 |
Panel 26 | Round 5 | 76.9 | 69.3 | 78.0 |
Panel 27 | Round 3 | 86.8 | 78.8 | 88.7 |
Round 4 | 79.3 | 67.4 | 88.7 | |
Panel 28 | Round 1 | 79.8 | 80.2 | 89.2 |
Round 2 | 80.2 | 68.5 | 78.1 |
Panel/round | Signature method | Permission forms requested | Permission forms signed | Signing rate (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Panel 1 | Round 3 | 19,913 | 14,468 | 72.7 | |
Round 5 | 8,685 | 6,002 | 69.1 | ||
Panel 2 | Round 3 | 12,241 | 8,694 | 71.0 | |
Round 5 | 8,640 | 6,297 | 72.9 | ||
Panel 3 | Round 3 | 9,016 | 5,929 | 65.8 | |
Round 5 | 7,569 | 5,200 | 68.7 | ||
Panel 4 | Round 3 | 11,856 | 8,280 | 69.8 | |
Round 5 | 10,688 | 8,318 | 77.8 | ||
Panel 5 | Round 3 | 9,248 | 6,852 | 74.1 | |
Round 5 | 8,955 | 7,174 | 80.1 | ||
Panel 6 | Round 3 | 19,305 | 15,313 | 79.3 | |
Round 5 | 17,981 | 14,864 | 82.7 | ||
Panel 7 | Round 3 | 14,456 | 11,611 | 80.3 | |
Round 5 | 13,428 | 11,210 | 83.5 | ||
Panel 8 | Round 3 | 14,391 | 11,533 | 80.1 | |
Round 5 | 13,422 | 11,049 | 82.3 | ||
Panel 9 | Round 3 | 14,334 | 11,189 | 78.1 | |
Round 5 | 13,416 | 10,893 | 81.2 | ||
Panel 10 | Round 3 | 13,928 | 10,706 | 76.9 | |
Round 5 | 12,869 | 10,260 | 79.7 | ||
Panel 11 | Round 3 | 14,937 | 11,328 | 75.8 | |
Round 5 | 13,778 | 11,332 | 82.3 | ||
Panel 12 | Round 3 | 10,840 | 8,242 | 76.0 | |
Round 5 | 9,930 | 8,015 | 80.7 | ||
Panel 13 | Round 3 | 15,379 | 12,165 | 79.1 | |
Round 4 | 10,782 | 7,795 | 72.3 | ||
Round 5 | 9,451 | 6,635 | 70.2 | ||
Panel 14 | Round 2 | 11,841 | 9,151 | 77.3 | |
Round 3 | 9,686 | 7,091 | 73.2 | ||
Round 4 | 9,298 | 6,623 | 71.2 | ||
Round 5 | 8,415 | 6,011 | 71.4 | ||
Panel 15 | Round 2 | 9,698 | 7,092 | 73.1 | |
Round 3 | 8,684 | 6,189 | 71.3 | ||
Round 4 | 8,163 | 5,756 | 70.5 | ||
Round 5 | 7,302 | 4,485 | 66.9 | ||
Panel 16 | Round 2 | 12,093 | 8,892 | 73.5 | |
Round 3 | 10,959 | 7,591 | 69.3 | ||
Round 4 | 10,432 | 8,194 | 78.6 | ||
Round 5 | 8,990 | 6,928 | 77.1 | ||
Panel 17 | Round 2 | 14,181 | 12,567 | 88.6 | |
Round 3 | 9,715 | 7,580 | 78.0 | ||
Round 4 | 9,759 | 7,730 | 79.2 | ||
Round 5 | 8,245 | 6,604 | 80.1 | ||
Panel 18 | Round 2 | 10,977 | 8,755 | 79.8 | |
Round 3 | 9,757 | 7,573 | 77.6 | ||
Round 4 | 8,526 | 6,858 | 80.4 | ||
Round 5 | 7,918 | 6,173 | 78.0 | ||
Panel 19 | Round 2 | 10,749 | 8,261 | 76.9 | |
Round 3 | 9,618 | 6,902 | 71.8 | ||
Round 4 | 8,557 | 6,579 | 76.9 | ||
Round 5 | 7,767 | 5,905 | 76.0 | ||
Panel 20 | Round 2 | 12,074 | 8,796 | 72.9 | |
Round 3 | 10,577 | 7,432 | 70.3 | ||
Round 4 | 9,0994 | 6,945 | 76.3 | ||
Round 5 | 8,312 | 6,339 | 76.3 | ||
Panel 21 | Round 2 | 10,783 | 7,985 | 74.1 | |
Round 3 | 9,540 | 6,847 | 71.8 | ||
Round 4 | 8,172 | 6,387 | 78.2 | ||
Round 5 | 6,684 | 5,336 | 79.8 | ||
Panel 22 | Round 2 | 10,510 | 7,919 | 75.4 | |
Round 3 | 8,053 | 5,953 | 73.9 | ||
Round 4 | 7,284 | 5,670 | 77.8 | ||
Round 5 | 8,048 | 5,726 | 71.1 | ||
Panel 23 | Round 2 | 8,834 | 6,514 | 73.8 | |
Round 3 | 9,614 | 6,205 | 64.5 | ||
Round 4 | 8,486 | 5,900 | 69.5 | ||
Round 5 | 8,067 | 5,101 | 63.2 | ||
Round 6 | 5,668 | 3,418 | 60.3 | ||
Round 7 | 5,417 | 3,345 | 61.8 | ||
Round 8 | 5,182 | 3,341 | 64.5 | ||
Round 9 | eSignature | 303 | 269 | 88.8 | |
DocuSign | 2,587 | 1,983 | 76.7 | ||
Paper | 1,240 | 563 | 45.4 | ||
Combined | 4,130 | 2,815 | 68.2 | ||
Panel 24 | Round 2 | 10,265 | 6,676 | 65.0 | |
Round 3 | 9,096 | 4,831 | 53.1 | ||
Round 4 | 7,100 | 3,636 | 51.2 | ||
Round 5 | 6,528 | 3,682 | 56.4 | ||
Round 6 | 4,783 | 2,663 | 55.7 | ||
Round 7 | eSignature | 336 | 310 | 92.3 | |
DocuSign | 2,763 | 2,073 | 75.0 | ||
Paper | 1,279 | 547 | 42.8 | ||
Combined | 4,378 | 2,930 | 66.9 | ||
Round 8 | eSignature | 480 | 449 | 93.5 | |
DocuSign | 2,238 | 1,527 | 68.2 | ||
Paper | 798 | 299 | 37.5 | ||
Combined | 3,516 | 2,275 | 64.7 | ||
Round 9 | eSignature | 235 | 222 | 94.5 | |
DocuSign | 2,217 | 1,511 | 68.2 | ||
Paper | 887 | 345 | 38.9 | ||
Combined | 3,339 | 2,078 | 62.2 | ||
Panel 25 | Round 2 | 6,783 | 3,180 | 46.9 | |
Round 3 | 6,114 | 3,146 | 51.5 | ||
Round 4 | 4,640 | 2,888 | 62.2 | ||
Round 5 | eSignature | 1,667 | 1,572 | 94.3 | |
DocuSign | 1,416 | 983 | 69.4 | ||
Paper | 787 | 181 | 23.0 | ||
Combined | 3,870 | 2,736 | 70.7 | ||
Panel 26 | Round 2 | 6,961 | 4,105 | 59.0 | |
Round 3 | eSignature | 2,916 | 2,725 | 93.4 | |
DocuSign | 1,749 | 1,121 | 64.1 | ||
Paper | 1,156 | 181 | 15.7 | ||
Combined | 5,821 | 4,027 | 69.2 | ||
Round 4 | eSignature | 2,848 | 2,710 | 95.2 | |
DocuSign | 1,212 | 652 | 53.8 | ||
Paper | 659 | 60 | 9.1 | ||
Combined | 4,719 | 3,422 | 72.5 | ||
Round 5 | eSignature | 446 | 422 | 94.6 | |
DocuSign | 2,853 | 1,945 | 68..2 | ||
Paper | 933 | 228 | 24.4 | ||
Combined | 4,232 | 2,595 | 61.3 | ||
Panel 27 | Round 2 | eSignature | 4,412 | 4,178 | 94.7 |
DocuSign | 1,972 | 842 | 42.7 | ||
Paper | 1,272 | 73 | 5.7 | ||
Combined | 7,656 | 5,093 | 66.5 | ||
Round 3 | eSignature | 3,420 | 3,215 | 94.0 | |
DocuSign | 1,973 | 1,028 | 52.1 | ||
Paper | 1,151 | 66 | 5.7 | ||
Combined | 6,544 | 4,309 | 65.8 | ||
Round 4 | eSignature | 3,115 | 3,008 | 96.6 | |
DocuSign | 1,638 | 1,078 | 65.8 | ||
Paper | 821 | 68 | 8.3 | ||
Combined | 5,574 | 4,154 | 74.5 | ||
Panel 28 | Round 2 | eSignature | 5,716 | 5,445 | 95.3 |
DocuSign | 1,669 | 853 | 51.1 | ||
Paper | 1,370 | 34 | 2.5 | ||
Combined | 8,755 | 6,332 | 72.3 |
Panel/Round | Survey Mode | SAQs requested | SAQs completed | SAQs refused | Other nonresponse | Response rate (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Panel 1 | Round 2 | 16,577 | 9,910 | - | - | 59.8 | |
Round 3 | 6,032 | 1,469 | 840 | 3,723 | 24.3 | ||
Combined, 1996 | 16,577 | 11,379 | - | - | 68.6 | ||
Panel 4* | Round 4 | 13,936 | 12,265 | 288 | 1,367 | 87.9 | |
Round 5 | 1,683 | 947 | 314 | 422 | 56.3 | ||
Combined, 2000 | 13,936 | 13,212 | - | - | 94.8 | ||
Panel 5* | Round 2 | 11,239 | 9,833 | 191 | 1,213 | 86.9 | |
Round 3 | 1,314 | 717 | 180 | 417 | 54.6 | ||
Combined, 2000 | 11,239 | 10,550 | - | - | 93.9 | ||
Round 4 | 7,812 | 6,790 | 198 | 824 | 86.9 | ||
Round 5 | 1,022 | 483 | 182 | 357 | 47.3 | ||
Combined, 2001 | 7,812 | 7,273 | - | - | 93.1 | ||
Panel 6 | Round 2 | 16,577 | 14,233 | 412 | 1,932 | 85.9 | |
Round 3 | 2,143 | 1,213 | 230 | 700 | 56.6 | ||
Combined, 2001 | 16,577 | 15,446 | - | - | 93.2 | ||
Round 4 | 15,687 | 13,898 | 362 | 1,427 | 88.6 | ||
Round 5 | 1,852 | 967 | 377 | 508 | 52.2 | ||
Combined, 2002 | 15,687 | 14,865 | - | - | 94.8 | ||
Panel 7 | Round 2 | 12,093 | 10,478 | 196 | 1,419 | 86.6 | |
Round 3 | 1,559 | 894 | 206 | 459 | 57.3 | ||
Combined, 2002 | 12,093 | 11,372 | - | - | 94.0 | ||
Round 4 | 11,703 | 10,125 | 285 | 1,292 | 86.5 | ||
Round 5 | 1,493 | 786 | 273 | 434 | 52.7 | ||
Combined, 2003 | 11,703 | 10,911 | - | - | 93.2 | ||
Panel 8 | Round 2 | 12,533 | 10,765 | 203 | 1,565 | 85.9 | |
Round 3 | 1,568 | 846 | 234 | 488 | 54.0 | ||
Combined, 2003 | 12,533 | 11,611 | - | - | 92.6 | ||
Round 4 | 11,996 | 10,534 | 357 | 1,105 | 87.8 | ||
Round 5 | 1,400 | 675 | 344 | 381 | 48.2 | ||
Combined, 2004 | 11,996 | 11,209 | - | - | 93.4 | ||
Panel 9 | Round 2 | 12,541 | 10,631 | 381 | 1,529 | 84.8 | |
Round 3 | 1,670 | 886 | 287 | 496 | 53.1 | ||
Combined, 2004 | 12,541 | 11,517 | - | - | 91.9 | ||
Round 4 | 11,913 | 10,357 | 379 | 1,177 | 86.9 | ||
Round 5 | 1,478 | 751 | 324 | 403 | 50.8 | ||
Combined, 2005 | 11,913 | 11,108 | - | - | 93.2 | ||
Panel 10 | Round 2 | 12,360 | 10,503 | 391 | 1,466 | 85.0 | |
Round 3 | 1,626 | 787 | 280 | 559 | 48.4 | ||
Combined, 2005 | 12,360 | 11,290 | - | - | 91.3 | ||
Round 4 | 11,726 | 10,081 | 415 | 1,230 | 86.0 | ||
Round 5 | 1,516 | 696 | 417 | 403 | 45.9 | ||
Combined, 2006 | 11,726 | 10,777 | - | - | 91.9 | ||
Panel 11 | Round 2 | 13,146 | 10,924 | 452 | 1,770 | 83.1 | |
Round 3 | 1,908 | 948 | 349 | 611 | 49.7 | ||
Combined, 2006 | 13,146 | 11,872 | - | - | 90.3 | ||
Round 4 | 12,479 | 10,771 | 622 | 1,086 | 86.3 | ||
Round 5 | 1,621 | 790 | 539 | 292 | 48.7 | ||
Combined, 2007 | 12,479 | 11,561 | - | - | 92.6 | ||
Panel 12 | Round 2 | 10,061 | 8,419 | 502 | 1,140 | 83.7 | |
Round 3 | 1,460 | 711 | 402 | 347 | 48.7 | ||
Combined, 2007 | 10,061 | 9,130 | - | - | 90.7 | ||
Round 4 | 9,550 | 8,303 | 577 | 670 | 86.9 | ||
Round 5 | 1,145 | 541 | 415 | 189 | 47.3 | ||
Combined, 2008 | 9,550 | 8,844 | - | - | 92.6 | ||
Panel 13 | Round 2 | 14,410 | 12,541 | 707 | 1,162 | 87.0 | |
Round 3 | 1,630 | 829 | 439 | 362 | 50.9 | ||
Combined, 2008 | 14,410 | 13,370 | - | - | 92.8 | ||
Round 4 | 13,822 | 12,311 | 559 | 952 | 89.1 | ||
Round 5 | 1,364 | 635 | 476 | 253 | 46.6 | ||
Combined, 2009 | 13,822 | 12,946 | - | - | 93.7 | ||
Panel 14 | Round 2 | 13,335 | 11,528 | 616 | 1,191 | 86.5 | |
Round 3 | 1,542 | 818 | 426 | 298 | 53.1 | ||
Combined, 2009 | 13,335 | 12,346 | - | - | 92.6 | ||
Round 4 | 12,527 | 11,041 | 644 | 839 | 88.1 | ||
Round 5 | 1,403 | 645 | 497 | 261 | 46.0 | ||
Combined, 2010 | 12,527 | 11,686 | - | - | 93.3 | ||
Panel 15 | Round 2 | 11,857 | 10,121 | 637 | 1,096 | 85.4 | |
Round 3 | 1,491 | 725 | 425 | 341 | 48.6 | ||
Combined, 2010 | 11,857 | 10,846 | - | - | 91.5 | ||
Round 4 | 11,311 | 9,804 | 572 | 935 | 86.7 | ||
Round 5 | 1,418 | 678 | 461 | 279 | 47.8 | ||
Combined, 2011 | 11,311 | 10,482 | - | - | 92.6 | ||
Panel 16 | Round 2 | 15,026 | 12,926 | 707 | 1393 | 86.0 | |
Round 3 | 1,863 | 949 | 465 | 449 | 50.9 | ||
Combined, 2011 | 15,026 | 13,875 | - | - | 92.3 | ||
Round 4 | 13,620 | 12,415 | 582 | 623 | 91.2 | ||
Round 5 | 1,112 | 516 | 442 | 154 | 46.4 | ||
Combined, 2012 | 13,620 | 12,931 | - | - | 94.9 | ||
Panel 17 | Round 2 | 14,181 | 12,567 | 677 | 937 | 88.6 | |
Round 3 | 1,395 | 690 | 417 | 288 | 49.5 | ||
Combined, 2012 | 14,181 | 13,257 | - | - | 93.5 | ||
Round 4 | 13,086 | 11,566 | 602 | 918 | 88.4 | ||
Round 5 | 1,429 | 655 | 504 | 270 | 45.8 | ||
Combined, 2013 | 13,086 | 12,221 | - | - | 93.4 | ||
Panel 18 | Round 2 | 13,158 | 10,805 | 785 | 1,568 | 82.1 | |
Round 3 | 2,066 | 1,022 | 547 | 497 | 48.5 | ||
Combined, 2013 | 13,158 | 11,827 | - | - | 89.9 | ||
Round 4 | 12,243 | 10,050 | 916 | 1,277 | 82.1 | ||
Round 5 | 2,063 | 936 | 721 | 406 | 45.4 | ||
Combined, 2014 | 12,243 | 10,986 | - | - | 89.7 | ||
Panel 19 | Round 2 | 12,664 | 10,047 | 1,014 | 1,603 | 79.3 | |
Round 3 | 2,306 | 1,050 | 694 | 615 | 44.5 | ||
Combined, 2014 | 12,664 | 11,097 | - | - | 87.6 | ||
Round 4 | 11,782 | 9,542 | 1,047 | 1,175 | 81.0 | ||
Round 5 | 2,131 | 894 | 822 | 414 | 42.0 | ||
Combined, 2015 | 11,782 | 10,436 | - | - | 88.6 | ||
Panel 20 | Round 2 | 14,077 | 10,885 | 1,223 | 1,966 | 77.3 | |
Round 3 | 2,899 | 1,329 | 921 | 649 | 45.8 | ||
Combined, 2015 | 14,077 | 12,214 | - | - | 86.8 | ||
Round 4 | 13,068 | 10,572 | 1,127 | 1,371 | 80.9 | ||
Round 5 | 2,262 | 1,001 | 891 | 370 | 44.3 | ||
Combined, 2016 | 13,068 | 11,573 | - | - | 88.6 | ||
Panel 21 | Round 2 | 13,143 | 10,212 | 1,170 | 1,761 | 77.7 | |
Round 3 | 2,585 | 1,123 | 893 | 569 | 43.4 | ||
Combined, 2016 | 13,143 | 11,335 | - | - | 86.2 | ||
Round 4 | 12,021 | 9,966 | 1,149 | 906 | 82.9 | ||
Round 5 | 2,078 | 834 | 884 | 360 | 40.1 | ||
Combined, 2017 | 12,021 | 10,800 | - | - | 89.8 | ||
Panel 22 | Round 2 | 12,304 | 9,929 | 1,086 | 1,289 | 80.7 | |
Round 3 | 2,287 | 840 | 749 | 698 | 36.7 | ||
Combined, 2017 | 12,304 | 10,769 | - | - | 87.5 | ||
Round 4 | 11,333 | 8,341 | 1,159 | 1,833 | 73.6 | ||
Round 5 | 2,090 | 811 | 896 | 383 | 38.8 | ||
Combined, 2018 | 11,333 | 9,152 | - | - | 80.8 | ||
Panel 23 | Round 2 | 12,349 | 8,711 | 1,364 | 1,289 | 70.5 | |
Round 3 | 2,364 | 819 | 907 | 638 | 34.6 | ||
Combined, 2018 | 12,369 | 9,530 | - | - | 77.2 | ||
Round 4 | 11,290 | 8,554 | 1,515 | 1,221 | 75.8 | ||
Round 5 | 2,711 | 983 | 923 | 805 | 36.3 | ||
Combined, 2019 | 11,290 | 9,537 | - | - | 84.5 | ||
Round 6 | 8,537 | 4,732 | 682 | 3,123 | 55.4 | ||
Round 7 | 3,229 | 1,123 | 707 | 1,399 | 34.8 | ||
Combined, 2020 | 8,537 | 5,855 | - | - | 68.6 | ||
Round 8 | 6,446 | 3,377 | 799 | 2,270 | 52.4 | ||
Round 9 | 2,654 | 724 | 633 | 1,297 | 27.3 | ||
Combined, 2021 | 6,446 | 4,101 | - | - | 63.6 | ||
Panel 24 | Round 2 | 12,027 | 8,726 | 1,641 | 1,660 | 72.6 | |
Round 3 | 2,810 | 860 | 832 | 1,118 | 30.6 | ||
Combined, 2019 | 12,027 | 9,586 | - | - | 79.7 | ||
Round 4 | 9,257 | 4,247 | 786 | 4,224 | 45.9 | ||
Round 5 | 4,224 | 1,476 | 838 | 1,910 | 34.9 | ||
Combined, 2020 | 9,257 | 5,723 | - | - | 61.8 | ||
Round 6 | 6,440 | 3,196 | 819 | 2,425 | 49.6 | ||
Round 7 | 2,695 | 696 | 628 | 1,371 | 25.8 | ||
Combined, 2021 | 6.440 | 3,892 | - | - | 60.4 | ||
Round 8 | 4,906 | 2,347 | 634 | 1,925 | 47.8 | ||
Round 9 | 2,415 | 413 | 632 | 1,730 | 17.1 | ||
Combined, 2022 | 4,906 | 2,760 | - | - | 56.2 | ||
Panel 25 | Round 2 | 8,109 | 3,555 | 529 | 4,025 | 43.8 | |
Round 3 | 4,016 | 1,322 | 717 | 1,977 | 32.9 | ||
Combined, 2020 | 8,109 | 4,877 | - | - | 60.1 | ||
Round 4 | 6,089 | 3,309 | 850 | 1,930 | 54.3 | ||
Round 5 | 2,325 | 655 | 583 | 1,087 | 28.2 | ||
Combined, 2021 | 6,089 | 3,964 | - | - | 65.1 | ||
Panel 26 | Round 2 | 8,419 | 4,609 | 1,009 | 2,801 | 54.7 | |
Round 3 | 2,950 | 853 | 732 | 1,365 | 28.9 | ||
Combined, 2021 | 8,419 | 5,462 | - | - | 64.9 | ||
Round 4 | 6,370 | 3,399 | 898 | 2,073 | 53.4 | ||
Panel 27 | Round 2 | 9,690 | 4,669 | 1,529 | 3,492 | 48.2 | |
Round 3 | 4,258 | 865 | 1,190 | 2,,203 | 20.3 | ||
Combined, 2022 | 9,690 | 5,534 | - | - | 57.1 | ||
Round 4 | Web | 5,497 | 2,,898 | 21 | 2,578 | 52..7 | |
Paper | 2,400 | 671 | 1,104 | 625 | 28.0 | ||
Combined | 7,897 | 3,569 | 1,,125 | 3,203 | 45.2 | ||
Panel 28 | Round 2 | Web | 7,108 | 3,597 | 22 | 3,489 | 50.6 |
Paper | 3,237 | 890 | 1,530 | 817 | 27.5 | ||
Combined | 10,345 | 4,487 | 1,,552 | 4,306 | 43.4 |
* Totals represent combined collection of the SAQ and the parent-administered questionnaire (PAQ).
Panel/Round | DCSs requested | DCSs completed | Response rate (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Panel 4 | Round 5 | 696 | 631 | 90.7 |
Panel 5 | Round 3 | 550 | 508 | 92.4 |
Round 5 | 570 | 500 | 87.7 | |
Panel 6 | Round 3 | 1,166 | 1,000 | 85.8 |
Round 5 | 1,202 | 1,166 | 97.0 | |
Panel 7 | Round 3 | 870 | 848 | 97.5 |
Round 5 | 869 | 820 | 94.4 | |
Panel 8 | Round 3 | 971 | 885 | 91.1 |
Round 5 | 977 | 894 | 91.5 | |
Panel 9 | Round 3 | 1,003 | 909 | 90.6 |
Round 5 | 904 | 806 | 89.2 | |
Panel 10 | Round 3 | 1,060 | 939 | 88.6 |
Round 5 | 1,078 | 965 | 89.5 | |
Panel 11 | Round 3 | 1,188 | 1,030 | 86.7 |
Round 5 | 1,182 | 1,053 | 89.1 | |
Panel 12 | Round 3 | 917 | 825 | 90.0 |
Round 5 | 883 | 815 | 92.3 | |
Panel 13 | Round 3 | 1,278 | 1,182 | 92.5 |
Round 5 | 1,278 | 1,154 | 90.3 | |
Panel 14 | Round 3 | 1,174 | 1,048 | 89.3 |
Round 5 | 1,177 | 1,066 | 90.6 | |
Panel 15 | Round 3 | 1,117 | 1,000 | 89.5 |
Round 5 | 1,097 | 990 | 90.3 | |
Panel 16 | Round 3 | 1,425 | 1,283 | 90.0 |
Round 5 | 1,358 | 1,256 | 92.5 | |
Panel 17 | Round 3 | 1,315 | 1,177 | 89.5 |
Round 5 | 1,308 | 1,174 | 89.8 | |
Panel 18 | Round 3 | 1,362 | 1,182 | 86.8 |
Round 5 | 1,342 | 1,187 | 88.5 | |
Panel 19 | Round 3 | 1,272 | 1,124 | 88.4 |
Round 5 | 1,316 | 1,144 | 87.2 | |
Panel 20 | Round 3 | 1,412 | 1,190 | 84.5 |
Round 5 | 1,386 | 1,174 | 84.9 | |
Panel 21 | Round 3 | 1,422 | 1,170 | 82.5 |
Round 5 | 1,481 | 1,212 | 81.8 | |
Panel 22 | Round 3 | 1,453 | 1,177 | 81.0 |
Round 5 | 1,348 | 1,018 | 75.5 | |
Panel 23 | Round 3 | 1,464 | 1,101 | 75.2 |
Round 5 | 1,350 | 933 | 69.1 | |
Round 7 | 1,018 | 648 | 63.7 | |
Round 9 | 813 | 446 | 54.9 | |
Panel 24 | Round 3 | 1,350 | 843 | 62.4 |
Round 5 | 1,082 | 599 | 55.4 | |
Round 7 | 817 | 443 | 54.2 | |
Round 9 | 687 | 324 | 47.2 | |
Panel 25 | Round 3 | 963 | 514 | 53.4 |
Round 5 | 758 | 419 | 55.3 | |
Panel 26 | Round 3 | 894 | 516 | 57.7 |
Round 5 | 746 | 360 | 48.3 | |
Panel 27 | Round 3 | 1,146 | 523 | 45.6 |
* Tables represent combined DCS/proxy DCS collection.
Pharmacy | Total number | Total received | Percentage received | Total complete | Completes as a percentage of total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 – P22R5 all mail collection | |||||
Total RUs | 921 | 173 | 18.8% | 125 | 13.6% |
Total Pairs | 1,387 | 199 | 14.3% | 183 | 13.2% |
2018 – P21R5 all mail collection | |||||
Total RUs | 2,920 | 417 | 20.7% | 316 | 15.6% |
Total Pairs | 4,116 | 486 | 16.6% | 425 | 14.5% |
2017 – P20R5 all mail collection | |||||
Total RUs | 1,953 | 342 | 17.5% | 254 | 13.0% |
Total Pairs | 2,723 | 372 | 13.7% | 326 | 12.0% |
2016 – P19R5 all mail collection | |||||
Total RUs | 2,038 | 374 | 18.4% | 285 | 14.0% |
Total Pairs | 2,854 | 430 | 15.1% | 394 | 13.8% |
2015 – P18R5 all mail collection | |||||
Total RUs | 1,404 | 260 | 18.5% | 186 | 13.2% |
Total Pairs | 2,042 | 289 | 14.2% | 255 | 12.5% |
2014 – P17R5 all mail collection | |||||
Total RUs | 2,230 | 372 | 16.7% | 269 | 12.1% |
Total Pairs | 3,233 | 443 | 13.7% | 386 | 11.9% |
2013 – P16R5 all mail collection | |||||
Total RUs | 2,014 | 417 | 20.7% | 316 | 15.6% |
Total Pairs | 2,911 | 486 | 16.6% | 425 | 14.5% |
2012 – P15R5 all mail collection | |||||
Total RUs | 1,390 | 290 | 20.8% | 203 | 14.6% |
Total Pairs | 1,990 | 348 | 17.4% | 290 | 14.5% |
Reason for call | Spring 2000 (Panel 5 Round 1, Panel 4 Round 3, Panel 3 Round 5) | Fall 2000 (Panel 5 Round 2, Panel 4 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address change | 23 | 4.0 | 13 | 8.3 | 8 | 5.7 |
Appointment | 37 | 6.5 | 26 | 16.7 | 28 | 19.9 |
Request callback | 146 | 25.7 | 58 | 37.2 | 69 | 48.9 |
Refusal | 183 | 32.2 | 20 | 12.8 | 12 | 8.5 |
Willing to participate | 10 | 1.8 | 2 | 1.3 | 0 | 0.0 |
Other | 157 | 27.6 | 35 | 22.4 | 8 | 5.7 |
Report a respondent deceased | 5 | 0.9 | 1 | 0.6 | 0 | 0.0 |
Request a Spanish-speaking interview | 8 | 1.4 | 1 | 0.6 | 0 | 0.0 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 16 | 11.3 |
Total | 569 | 156 | 141 |
Reason for call | Spring 2001 (Panel 6 Round 1, Panel 5 Round 3, Panel 4 Round 5) | Fall 2001 (Panel 6 Round 2, Panel 5 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 27 | 3.7 | 17 | 12.7 | 56 | 15.7 |
Appointment | 119 | 16.2 | 56 | 41.8 | 134 | 37.5 |
Request callback | 259 | 35.3 | 36 | 26.9 | 92 | 25.8 |
No message | 8 | 1.1 | 3 | 2.2 | 0 | 0.0 |
Other | 29 | 4.0 | 7 | 5.2 | 31 | 8.7 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 2 | 1.5 | 10 | 2.8 |
Special needs | 5 | 0.7 | 3 | 2.2 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 278 | 37.9 | 10 | 7.5 | 25 | 7.0 |
Willing to participate | 8 | 1.1 | 0 | 0.0 | 9 | 2.5 |
Total | 733 | 134 | 357 |
Reason for call | Spring 2002 (Panel 7 Round 1, Panel 6 Round 3, Panel 5 Round 5) | Fall 2002 (Panel 7 Round 2, Panel 6 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 28 | 4.5 | 29 | 13.9 | 66 | 16.7 |
Appointment | 77 | 12.5 | 71 | 34.1 | 147 | 37.1 |
Request callback | 210 | 34.0 | 69 | 33.2 | 99 | 25.0 |
No message | 6 | 1.0 | 3 | 1.4 | 5 | 1.3 |
Other | 41 | 6.6 | 17 | 8.2 | 10 | 2.5 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 30 | 7.6 |
Special needs | 1 | 0.2 | 0 | 0.0 | 3 | 0.8 |
Refusal | 232 | 37.6 | 14 | 6.7 | 29 | 7.3 |
Willing to participate | 22 | 3.6 | 5 | 2.4 | 7 | 1.8 |
Total | 617 | 208 | 396 |
Reason for call | Spring 2003 (Panel 8 Round 1, Panel 7 Round 3, Panel 6 Round 5) | Fall 2003 (Panel 8 Round 2, Panel 7 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 20 | 4.2 | 33 | 13.7 | 42 | 17.9 |
Appointment | 83 | 17.5 | 87 | 36.1 | 79 | 33.8 |
Request callback | 165 | 34.9 | 100 | 41.5 | 97 | 41.5 |
No message | 16 | 3.4 | 7 | 2.9 | 6 | 2.6 |
Other | 9 | 1.9 | 8 | 3.3 | 3 | 1.3 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.4 |
Special needs | 5 | 1.1 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 158 | 33.4 | 6 | 2.5 | 6 | 2.6 |
Willing to participate | 17 | 3.6 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Total | 473 | 241 | 234 |
Reason for call | Spring 2004 (Panel 9 Round 1, Panel 8 Round 3, Panel 7 Round 5) | Fall 2004 (Panel 9 Round 2, Panel 8 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 8 | 1.6 | 26 | 13.2 | 42 | 10.9 |
Appointment | 67 | 13.3 | 76 | 38.6 | 153 | 39.7 |
Request callback | 158 | 31.5 | 77 | 39.1 | 139 | 36.1 |
No message | 9 | 1.8 | 5 | 2.5 | 16 | 4.2 |
Other | 8 | 1.6 | 5 | 2.5 | 5 | 1.3 |
Proxy needed | 5 | 1.0 | 2 | 1.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 2 | 0.5 |
Special needs | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 228 | 45.4 | 6 | 3.0 | 27 | 7.0 |
Willing to participate | 19 | 3.8 | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.3 |
Total | 502 | 197 | 385 |
Reason for call | Spring 2005 (Panel 10 Round 1, Panel 9 Round 3, Panel 8 Round 5) | Fall 2005 (Panel 10 Round 2, Panel 9 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 16 | 3.3 | 23 | 8.7 | 27 | 6.8 |
Appointment | 77 | 15.7 | 117 | 44.3 | 177 | 44.4 |
Request callback | 154 | 31.4 | 88 | 33.3 | 126 | 31.6 |
No message | 14 | 2.9 | 11 | 4.2 | 28 | 7.0 |
Other | 13 | 2.7 | 1 | 0.4 | 8 | 2.0 |
Proxy needed | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.3 |
Special needs | 1 | 0.2 | 1 | 0.4 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 195 | 39.8 | 20 | 7.6 | 30 | 7.5 |
Willing to participate | 20 | 4.1 | 3 | 1.1 | 2 | 0.5 |
Total | 490 | 264 | 399 |
Reason for call | Spring 2006 (Panel 11 Round 1, Panel 10 Round 3, Panel 9 Round 5) | Fall 2006 (Panel 11 Round 2, Panel 10 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 7 | 1.3 | 24 | 7.5 | 11 | 4.1 |
Appointment | 61 | 11.3 | 124 | 39.0 | 103 | 38.1 |
Request callback | 146 | 27.1 | 96 | 30.2 | 101 | 37.4 |
No message | 72 | 13.4 | 46 | 14.5 | 21 | 7.8 |
Other | 16 | 3.0 | 12 | 3.8 | 8 | 3.0 |
Proxy needed | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 4 | 0.7 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 216 | 40.1 | 15 | 4.7 | 26 | 9.6 |
Willing to participate | 17 | 3.2 | 1 | 0.3 | 0 | 0.0 |
Total | 539 | 318 | 270 |
Reason for call | Spring 2007 (Panel 12 Round 1, Panel 11 Round 3, Panel 10 Round 5) | Fall 2007 (Panel 12 Round 2, Panel 11 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 8 | 2.1 | 21 | 7.3 | 23 | 7.6 |
Appointment | 56 | 14.6 | 129 | 44.8 | 129 | 42.6 |
Request callback | 72 | 18.8 | 75 | 26.0 | 88 | 29.0 |
No message | 56 | 14.6 | 37 | 12.8 | 33 | 10.9 |
Other | 20 | 5.2 | 15 | 5.2 | 6 | 2.0 |
Proxy needed | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 5 | 1.3 | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.3 |
Refusal | 160 | 41.8 | 10 | 3.5 | 21 | 6.9 |
Willing to participate | 6 | 1.6 | 1 | 0.3 | 2 | 0.7 |
Total | 383 | 288 | 303 |
Reason for call | Spring 2008 (Panel 13 Round 1, Panel 12 Round 3, Panel 11 Round 5) | Fall 2008 (Panel 13 Round 2, Panel 12 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 20 | 3.4 | 12 | 4.7 | 21 | 5.7 |
Appointment | 92 | 15.5 | 117 | 45.9 | 148 | 39.9 |
Request callback | 164 | 27.6 | 81 | 31.8 | 154 | 41.5 |
No message | 82 | 13.8 | 20 | 7.8 | 22 | 5.9 |
Other | 13 | 2.2 | 12 | 4.7 | 8 | 2.2 |
Proxy needed | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 4 | 0.7 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 196 | 32.9 | 13 | 5.1 | 18 | 4.9 |
Willing to participate | 24 | 4.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Total | 595 | 255 | 371 |
Reason for call | Spring 2009 (Panel 14 Round 1, Panel 13 Round 3, Panel 12 Round 5) | Fall 2009 (Panel 14 Round 2, Panel 13 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 10 | 2.2 | 13 | 4.3 | 19 | 5.1 |
Appointment | 49 | 10.8 | 87 | 29.0 | 153 | 41.1 |
Request callback | 156 | 34.4 | 157 | 52.3 | 153 | 41.1 |
No message | 48 | 10.6 | 23 | 7.7 | 20 | 5.4 |
Other | 3 | 0.7 | 8 | 2.7 | 3 | 0.8 |
Proxy needed | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 4 | 0.9 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 183 | 40.3 | 11 | 3.7 | 24 | 6.5 |
Willing to participate | 1 | 0.2 | 1 | 0.3 | 0 | 0.0 |
Total | 454 | 300 | 372 |
Reason for call | Spring 2010 (Panel 15 Round 1, Panel 14 Round 3, Panel 13 Round 5) | Fall 2010 (Panel 15 Round 2, Panel 14 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 2 | 0.8 | 42 | 8.2 | 25 | 5.3 |
Appointment | 44 | 18.0 | 214 | 41.6 | 309 | 66.0 |
Request callback | 87 | 35.7 | 196 | 38.1 | 46 | 9.8 |
No message | 17 | 7.0 | 33 | 6.4 | 17 | 3.6 |
Other | 7 | 2.9 | 8 | 1.6 | 14 | 3.0 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 12 | 2.6 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.2 |
Special needs | 1 | 0.4 | 1 | 0.2 | 1 | 0.2 |
Refusal | 86 | 35.2 | 20 | 3.9 | 43 | 9.2 |
Willing to participate | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Total | 244 | 514 | 468 |
Reason for call | Spring 2011 (Panel 16 Round 1, Panel 15 Round 3, Panel 14 Round 5) | Fall 2011 (Panel 16 Round 2, Panel 15 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 16 | 3.4 | 46 | 8.0 | 72 | 9.8 |
Appointment | 175 | 37.6 | 407 | 71.0 | 466 | 63.5 |
Request callback | 81 | 17.4 | 63 | 11.0 | 69 | 9.4 |
No message | 24 | 5.2 | 26 | 4.5 | 23 | 3.1 |
Other | 12 | 2.6 | 8 | 1.4 | 25 | 3.4 |
Request SAQ help | 1 | 0.2 | 2 | 0.3 | 32 | 4.4 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 46 | 6.3 |
Special needs | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.1 |
Refusal | 157 | 33.7 | 21 | 3.7 | 0 | 0.0 |
Willing to participate | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0.0 | |
Total | 466 | 573 | 734 |
Reason for call | Spring 2012 (Panel 17 Round 1, Panel 16 Round 3, Panel 15 Round 5) | Fall 2012 (Panel 17 Round 2, Panel 16 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 18 | 5.0 | 107 | 13.4 | 108 | 12.2 |
Appointment | 130 | 36.1 | 517 | 64.9 | 584 | 65.8 |
Request callback | 60 | 16.7 | 94 | 11.8 | 57 | 6.4 |
No message | 21 | 5.8 | 17 | 2.1 | 18 | 2.0 |
Other | 10 | 2.8 | 25 | 3.1 | 16 | 1.8 |
Proxy needed | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.1 | 2 | 0.2 |
Request SAQ help | 2 | 0.6 | 6 | 0.8 | 42 | 4.7 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 1 | 0.3 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 117 | 32.5 | 30 | 3.8 | 60 | 6.8 |
Willing to participate | 1 | 0.3 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Total | 360 | 797 | 887 |
Reason for call | Spring 2013 (Panel 18 Round 1, Panel 17 Round 3, Panel 16 Round 5) | Fall 2013 (Panel 18 Round 2, Panel 17 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 18 | 4.4 | 82 | 10.8 | 53 | 9.0 |
Appointment | 143 | 35.0 | 558 | 73.0 | 370 | 62.6 |
Request callback | 71 | 17.4 | 88 | 11.5 | 70 | 11.8 |
No message | 8 | 2.0 | 11 | 1.4 | 16 | 2.8 |
Other | 2 | 0.5 | 4 | .5 | 5 | 0.9 |
Proxy needed | 1 | 0.2 | 1 | 0.1 | 1 | 0.2 |
Request SAQ help | 1 | 0.2 | 0 | 0.0 | 31 | 5.3 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 2 | 0.5 | 0 | 0.0 | 2 | 0.3 |
Refusal | 162 | 39.5 | 19 | 2.5 | 43 | 7.3 |
Willing to participate | 1 | 0.2 | 1 | 0.1 | 0 | 0.0 |
Total | 409 | 764 | 591 |
Reason for call | Spring 2014 (Panel 19 Round 1, Panel 18 Round 3, Panel 17 Round 5) | Fall 2014 (Panel 19 Round 2, Panel 18 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 11 | 3.2 | 71 | 11.1 | 62 | 8.4 |
Appointment | 75 | 22.1 | 393 | 61.5 | 490 | 66.5 |
Request callback | 70 | 20.6 | 113 | 17.7 | 70 | 9.5 |
No message | 11 | 3.2 | 12 | 1.9 | 28 | 3.9 |
Other | 0 | 0.0 | 5 | 0.8 | 7 | 0.9 |
Proxy needed | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.1 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.2 | 4 | 0.5 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 165 | 48.5 | 44 | 6.9 | 74 | 10.0 |
Willing to participate | 8 | 2.4 | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.1 |
Total | 340 | 639 | 737 |
Reason for call | Spring 2015 (Panel 20 Round 1, Panel 19 Round 3, Panel 18 Round 5) | Fall 2015 (Panel 20 Round 2, Panel 19 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 10 | 2.3 | 61 | 8.8 | 55 | 9.6 |
Appointment | 95 | 21.8 | 438 | 63.4 | 346 | 60.7 |
Request callback | 85 | 19.5 | 112 | 16.2 | 52 | 9.1 |
No message | 14 | 3.2 | 17 | 2.5 | 4 | 0.7 |
Other | 2 | 0.5 | 3 | 0.4 | 3 | 0.5 |
Proxy needed | 1 | 0.2 | 7 | 1.0 | 8 | 1.4 |
Request SAQ help | 1 | 0.2 | 3 | 0.4 | 11 | 1.9 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 206 | 47.2 | 47 | 6.8 | 91 | 16.0 |
Willing to participate | 22 | 5.0 | 3 | 0.4 | 0 | 0.0 |
Total | 436 | 691 | 570 |
Reason for call | Spring 2016 (Panel 21 Round 1, Panel 20 Round 3, Panel 19 Round 5) | Fall 2016 (Panel 21 Round 2, Panel 20 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 8 | 2.7 | 64 | 11.7 | 48 | 7.9 |
Appointment | 93 | 30.9 | 362 | 66.2 | 373 | 61.7 |
Request callback | 47 | 15.6 | 59 | 10.8 | 83 | 13.7 |
No message | 1 | 0.3 | 7 | 1.3 | 6 | 1.0 |
Other | 2 | 0.7 | 1 | 0.2 | 3 | 0.5 |
Proxy needed | 0 | 0.0 | 5 | 0.9 | 6 | 1.0 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 3 | 0.5 | 11 | 1.8 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 1 | 0.3 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 139 | 46.2 | 46 | 8.4 | 75 | 12.4 |
Willing to participate | 10 | 3.3 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Total | 301 | 547 | 605 |
Reason for call | Spring 2017 (Panel 22 Round 1, Panel 21 Round 3, Panel 20 Round 5) | Fall 2017 (Panel 22 Round 2, Panel 21 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 10 | 2.9 | 51 | 9.6 | 35 | 6.8 |
Appointment | 86 | 24.9 | 355 | 66.6 | 318 | 61.4 |
Request callback | 59 | 17.1 | 90 | 16.9 | 64 | 12.4 |
No message | 1 | 0.3 | 2 | 0.4 | 5 | 1.0 |
Other | 2 | 0.6 | 3 | 0.6 | 4 | 0.8 |
Proxy needed | 1 | 0.3 | 7 | 1.3 | 5 | 1.0 |
Request SAQ help | 1 | 0.3 | 0 | 0.0 | 15 | 2.9 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.2 | 1 | 0.2 |
Refusal | 172 | 49.7 | 23 | 4.3 | 70 | 13.5 |
Willing to participate | 14 | 4.0 | 1 | 0.2 | 1 | 0.2 |
Total | 346 | 533 | 518 |
Reason for call | Spring 2018 (Panel 23 Round 1, Panel 22 Round 3, Panel 21 Round 5) | Fall 2018 (Panel 23 Round 2, Panel 22 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 5 | 1.3 | 37 | 7.9 | 38 | 7.3 |
Appointment | 59 | 15.4 | 318 | 68.1 | 335 | 63.9 |
Request callback | 50 | 13.1 | 50 | 10.7 | 60 | 11.5 |
No message | 4 | 1.0 | 5 | 1.1 | 1 | 0.2 |
Other | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.2 | 3 | 0.6 |
Proxy needed | 2 | 0.5 | 4 | 0.9 | 6 | 1.1 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.2 | 15 | 2.9 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 1 | 0.3 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 211 | 55.1 | 46 | 9.9 | 61 | 11.6 |
Willing to participate | 51 | 13.3 | 5 | 1.1 | 5 | 1.0 |
Total | 383 | 467 | 524 |
Reason for call | Spring 2019 (Panel 24 Round 1, Panel 23 Round 3, Panel 22 Round 5) | Fall 2019 (Panel 24 Round 2, Panel 23 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 5 | 1.5 | 36 | 7.4 | 30 | 5.6 |
Appointment | 59 | 17.2 | 328 | 67.5 | 344 | 64.8 |
Request callback | 39 | 11.4 | 56 | 11.5 | 56 | 10.5 |
No message | 2 | 0.6 | 4 | 0.8 | 7 | 1.3 |
Other | 2 | 0.6 | 4 | 0.8 | 0 | 0.0 |
Proxy needed | 2 | 0.6 | 6 | 1.2 | 11 | 2.1 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 2 | 0.4 | 5 | 0.9 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 48 | 9.9 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 185 | 53.9 | 0 | 0.0 | 78 | 14.7 |
Willing to participate | 49 | 14.3 | 2 | 0.4 | 0 | 0.0 |
Total | 353 | 486 | 531 |
Reason for call | Spring 2020 (Panel 25 Round 1, Panel 24 Round 3, Panel 23 Round 5) | Fall 2020 (Panel 25 Round 2, Panel 24 Round 4, Panel 23 Round 6) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3 and 5 | Rounds 2, 4, and 6 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 5 | 0.9 | 37 | 6.3 | 28 | 2.4 |
Appointment | 142 | 24.2 | 332 | 56.1 | 278 | 23.9 |
Request callback | 102 | 17.4 | 121 | 20.4 | 276 | 23.7 |
No message | 22 | 3.8 | 18 | 3.0 | 60 | 5.2 |
Other | 2 | 0.3 | 5 | 0.8 | 5 | 0.4 |
Proxy needed | 6 | 1.0 | 3 | 0.5 | 10 | 0.9 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.2 | 35 | 3.0 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.1 |
Special needs | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.1 |
Refusal | 209 | 35.7 | 62 | 10.5 | 203 | 17.5 |
Willing to participate | 98 | 16.7 | 13 | 2.2 | 266 | 22.9 |
Total | 586 | 592 | 1,163 |
Reason for call | Spring 2021 (Panel 26 Round 1, Panel 25 Round 3, Panel 24 Round 5, Panel 23 Round 7) | Fall 2021 (Panel 26 Round 2, Panel 25 Round 4, Panel 24 Round 6, Panel 23 Round 8) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3, 5, 7 | Rounds 2, 4, 6, 8 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 2 | 0.6 | 19 | 3.4 | 59 | 7.0 |
Appointment | 27 | 8.1 | 76 | 13.7 | 233 | 27.5 |
Request callback | 101 | 30.1 | 240 | 43.2 | 287 | 33.8 |
No message | 34 | 10.1 | 21 | 3.8 | 41 | 4.8 |
Other | 8 | 2.4 | 48 | 8.6 | 8 | 0.9 |
Proxy needed | 0 | 0.0 | 7 | 1.3 | 13 | 1.5 |
Request SAQ help | 3 | 0.9 | 17 | 3.1 | 15 | 1.8 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.2 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 0 | 0.0 | 2 | 0.4 | 1 | 0.1 |
Refusal | 87 | 26.0 | 87 | 15.7 | 176 | 20.8 |
Willing to participate | 73 | 21.8 | 37 | 6.7 | 15 | 1.8 |
Total | 335 | 555 | 848 |
Reason for call | Spring 2022 (Panel 27 Round 1, Panel 26 Round 3, Panel 25 Round 5, Panel 24 Round 7, Panel 23 Round 9) | Fall 2022 (Panel 27 Round 2, Panel 26 Round 4, Panel 24 Round 8) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3, 5, 7, 9 | Rounds 2, 4, 8 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 4 | 0.9 | 42 | 5.1 | 25 | 4.3 |
Appointment | 91 | 21.4 | 215 | 26.3 | 99 | 17.0 |
Request callback | 130 | 30.5 | 236 | 28.9 | 260 | 44.5 |
No message | 13 | 3.1 | 23 | 2.8 | 22 | 3.8 |
Other | 21 | 4.9 | 236 | 28.9 | 84 | 14.4 |
Proxy needed | 4 | 0.9 | 6 | 0.7 | 6 | 1.0 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Refusal | 119 | 27.9 | 58 | 7.1 | 82 | 14.0 |
Willing to participate | 44 | 10.3 | 2 | 0.2 | 6 | 1.0 |
Total | 426 | 818 | 584 |
Reason for call | Spring 2023 (Panel 28 Round 1, Panel 27 Round 3, Panel 26 Round 5, Panel 24 Round 9) | Fall 2023 (Panel 28 Round 2, Panel 27 Round 4) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 | Rounds 3, 5, 9 | Rounds 2 and 4 | ||||
N | % | N | % | N | % | |
Address/telephone change | 9 | 2.6 | 27 | 4.7 | 5 | 2.4 |
Appointment | 45 | 13.0 | 131 | 23.0 | 39 | 18.5 |
Request callback | 99 | 28.5 | 207 | 36.4 | 49 | 23.2 |
No message | 8 | 2.3 | 18 | 3.2 | 6 | 2.8 |
Other | 21 | 6.1 | 129 | 22.7 | 69 | 32.7 |
Proxy needed | 1 | 0.3 | 3 | 0.5 | 1 | 0.5 |
Request SAQ help | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
SAQ refusal | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 |
Special needs | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0.5 |
Refusal | 88 | 25.4 | 46 | 8.1 | 38 | 18.0 |
Willing to participate | 76 | 21.9 | 8 | 1.4 | 3 | 1.4 |
Total | 347 | 569 | 211 |
Date | Description |
---|---|
1/3/2023 | PRPL0179.01: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #1 |
1/3/2023 | UEGN3638.03: Deliver to AHRQ for approval specifications for the FY21 MPC (OB, OP, ER, and IP) Expenditure Event files |
1/3/2023 | UEGN3640.01: Deliver to AHRQ for approval variable lists for the FY21 non-MPC (DN, OM, and HH) Expenditure Event files |
1/3/2023 | WGTS2098.01: Derivation of the MEPS Panel 26 Full Year 2021 Person Use Weights (Rounds 1-3) |
1/3/2023 | WGTS2100.01: Panel 24 Full Year 2021: Derivation of the MEPS Person Use Weights (Rounds 5-7) |
1/4/2023 | DOCM0714.01: Delivery of the 2023 NPI Provider Directory from the Panel 28 MEPS Laptop |
1/4/2023 | EMPL2279.05: Delivery of the Full Year 2021 Pre-Top-Coded Hourly Wage Variables and Person-Level, Uncondensed Industry and Occupation Codes |
1/5/2023 | UEPD1227.06: 2021 INSURC21 variable for use in the Prescribed Medicines Imputation |
1/9/2023 | GNRL4104.01: Delivery of the Single Round Data Exchange (SRD) for Panel 27 Round 2 |
1/9/2023 | INCO0761.01: Delivery of the 2021 Income File |
1/9/2023 | UEGN2933.01: 2021 Specification for Rolling Events Before Edits, and UEGN 2935.01 2021 Specifications for Preparing SBD Nodes for Editing |
1/9/2023 | UEGN2934.01: 2021 Specifications for Imputing Expenditures for Capitated Events |
1/9/2023 | UEGN2936.01: 2021 Specs for Attaching SBDs Expenditures to Facility Events (SBDATTACH), and UEGN2937.01: 2021 Specifications for Mom-Baby SBD Rollups |
1/10/2023 | EMPL2281.01: Full Year 2021 Wage Top Coding Results |
1/10/2023 | UEGN2939.01: 2021 Specifications for HHA Free Donor Fix, UEGN 2947.01 2021 Specifications for MPC Free Donor Fix, and UEGN 2948.01 2021 Specifications for SBD Free Donor Fix |
1/11/2023 | ADMN0929.01: Delivery of 2021 FAMID Variables and CPS Family Identifier |
1/11/2023 | COND1006.04: 2021 CLNK File Specifications |
1/11/2023 | GNRL4101.01: FY 2021 (Panel 23, Panel 24, Panel 25, and Panel 26) Snapshots of HC Source Tables Including the COND21X, JOBS21X, SAQ, DCS and SDOH Tables |
1/11/2023 | GNRL4102.01: Delivery of the Single Round Data Exchange (SRD) for Panel 24 Round 8 |
1/11/2023 | GNRL410301: Delivery of the Single Round Data Exchange (SRD) for Panel 26 Round 4 |
1/11/2023 | GNRL4105.01- GNRL4105.03: Delivery of the RU-Level End-Of-Round Files - P24R8/P26R4/P27R2 |
1/11/2023 | GNRL4106.01- GNRL4106.03: Delivery of the Person-Level End-Of-Round Files - P24R8/P26R4/P27R2 |
1/11/2023 | UEGN 2940.01: 2021 Specifications for Global Fee Bundle Processing, and UEGN 2941.01 2021 Specifications for LOS Imputations |
1/12/2023 | COND1006.06: 2021 CLNK File Specifications |
1/12/2023 | DOCM0711.02: Delivery of the 2022 MPC files for Sample selection - Wave 1 |
1/12/2023 | DOCM0712.02: Delivery of the 2022 PC Sample file - Wave 1 |
1/12/2023 | DOCM0713.02: Delivery of the 2022 Provider file for NPI coding - Wave 1 |
1/12/2023 | PCND0166.01: FY21 Person-Level Priority Conditions Cross-Tabulations |
1/13/2023 | DEMO1020.02: Delivery of the Output Listings for Final Case Review of the MOPID and DAPID Variables’ Construction for FY2021 |
1/13/2023 | GNRL3137.01: Preliminary Version of the 2021 Full-Year Use PUF Dataset |
1/13/2023 | GNRL3138.01: Full-Year 2021 CAPI Specifications and Help Text in HTML Format for Web Release |
1/13/2023 | PRPL0180.01: FY21 PRPL Specifications for the OOPELIG, Imputation and final file creation programs |
1/13/2023 | UEGN2942.01: 2021 Specifications for MPC Edits, UEGN 2944.01 2021 Specifications for Post-Edit Rollups, and UEGN 2945.01 2021 Specifications for Household Discount Adjustment |
1/17/2023 | PRPL0179.08: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #1 |
1/17/2023 | PRPL0181.01: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #2 |
1/18/2023 | WGTS2096.01: Creation of CPS Control Total Files Containing the Raking Dimensions for the Full Year 2021 Self-Administered Questionnaire Use Person Weight |
1/19/2023 | PRPL0180.06: FY21 PRPL Specifications for the OOPELIG, Imputation and final file creation programs |
1/19/2023 | UEGN2946.01: 2021 Specifications for SBD Edits and UEGN 2949.01 2021 Specs for Rolling SBDs to Facility Event Level |
1/19/2023 | WGTS2107.01: Full Year 2021 Person Weights Nursing Home and Mortality Adjustment review output |
1/24/2023 | DSDY0070.01: Delivery of the DSDY “Missed Days” top code values for AHRQ approval |
1/24/2023 | WGTS2108.01: MEPS - Full Year 2021 Combined Panels Population Characteristics PUF Person Weights review output |
1/24/2023 | WGTS2075.01: MEPS Panel 26 Round 1 - Creation of Housing Units Populations Control Totals for Calibrating NHTS Household Weights |
1/24/2023 | WGTS2077.01: MEPS Panel 26 Round 1 - Proposed Alternative Weighting Approaches for 2020 NHIS Weights to account for Subsampling of States |
1/24/2023 | WGTS5049.01: Delivery of the Variance Strata and PSU Variables for FY2021 |
1/30/2023 | WGTS2113.01: Panel 23 Full Year 2021 SDOH Person Weight review output |
1/30/2023 | WGTS2111.01: MEPS Panel 25 Full Year 2021: Developing the MEPS Person-Level Social Determinants of Health Questionnaire (SDOH) Use Weights |
1/30/2023 | WGTS2064.01: Creating Factors to Adjust the Panels 23 and 24 2020 Full Year Person Weights to Better Reflect the Number of Persons who Died or Spent Part of the year in a Nursing Home |
1/31/2023 | FOOD0011.01: Full-Year 2021 Food Security PUF Constructed Variable Specifications |
1/31/2023 | PRPL0182.01: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #3a |
2/1/2023 | DEMO1020.03: Delivery of the MOPID and DAPID Variables for FY2021 |
2/1/2023 | WGTS2095.01: Creation of CPS Control Total Files Containing the Ranking Dimensions for the Full Year 2021 Social Determinants of Health Questionnaire (SDOH) Use Person Weight |
2/1/2023 | WGTS5050.01: Delivery of Person-Level Use PUF Weight, Single Panel Person Weight, and MSA21_13 Variables for FY21 |
2/2/2023 | PRPL0183.01: Insurance Status in PRPL Public Use File |
2/3/2023 | ADMN0930.01: FY22 Basic edit specs |
2/3/2023 | HINS1367.01: FY2022 Design Change Memo: Summary of the MEPS Household Component CAPI for FY2022 (P24 R7-9, P26 R3-5, and P27 R1-3) and Potential Effect on 2022 Data Delivery Content |
2/3/2023 | UEGN2958.01: 2021 Listing of Events with Questionable MPC Reported Expenditures |
2/6/2023 | PRPL0182.02: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #3a |
2/6/2023 | UEGN3642.01: Deliver to AHRQ for approval variable lists for the FY21 MPC (OP, ER, OB, and IP) Expenditure Event files |
2/6/2023 | WGTS2114.01: Full Year 2021 Combined Panels Population Characteristics PUF SDOH Person Weight review output |
2/7/2023 | GNRL3139.01: NCHS Checklist and Preliminary Version of the 2021 JOBS File Delivery Document for Review |
2/7/2023 | GNRL3140.01: NCHS Checklist and FY 2021 Use PUF Preliminary Delivery Document |
2/8/2023 | PRPL0182.03: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #3a |
2/8/2023 | HLTH1073.01: Summary of the MEPS Household Component CAPI and Teleform Changes for HLTH FY2022 and Potential Effect on Data Delivery |
2/8/2023 | HLTH1073.03: Summary of the MEPS Household Component CAPI and Teleform Changes for HLTH FY2022 and Potential Effect on Data Delivery |
2/10/2023 | HINS1368.01: Redelivery of the FY2021 Ever Insured, Month-by-Month, and Medicare Part D files with Census-adjusted Person Weight |
2/10/2023 | INCO0760.02: Re-Delivery of the 2020 NHIS Link File |
2/10/2023 | PRPL0181.08: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #2 |
2/10/2023 | PRPL0182.04: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #3a |
2/10/2023 | WGTS2118.01: Panel 26 Full Year 2021 SAQ Population Characteristics person weight |
2/10/2023 | WGTS5051.01: Delivery of the SDOH Use Person Raked Weight and Individual Panel SDOH Use Person Weight Variables for FY2021 |
2/15/2023 | GNRL3141.01: Preliminary Version of the 2021 Jobs File Codebook and Updated Delivery Document for AHRQ and NCHS Review |
2/15/2023 | GNRL3142.01: Preliminary Version of the 2021 Jobs PUF Data Set |
2/15/2023 | GNRL3143.01: Preliminary Versions of the Codebook and Delivery Document of the FY 2021 Use PUF for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
2/15/2023 | GNRL3144.01: Preliminary Version of the 2021 Use PUF Data Set |
2/15/2023 | HLTH1073.02: Updated Summary of the MEPS Household Component CAPI and Teleform Changes for HLTH FY2022 and Potential Effect on Data Delivery |
2/16/2023 | PCND0167.01: Summary of the MEPS Household Component CAPI for PCND FY2022 and Potential Effect on 2022 Data Delivery Content |
2/16/2023 | UEGN3643.01: Overlapping ER/HS Events |
2/17/2023 | ACCS0200.01: Access to Care - Summary of the MEPS HC CAPI for FY 2022 and Potential Effect on Data Delivery |
2/17/2023 | WGTS2114.01: Combined Panels Full Year 2021: Derivation of the MEPS Full Year Person-Level Social Determinants of Health Questionnaire (SDOH) Use Weights for the Population Characteristics Public Use File |
2/23/2023 | PRPL0184.01: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #3b |
2/24/2023 | CODE0955.01: 2021 File of GEO Coded Addresses for the MEPS Master Files |
2/27/2023 | WGTS2119.01: Panel 25 Full Year 2021 SAQ Population Characteristics person weight |
2/28/2023 | GNRL3141.03: Final Versions of the 2021 Jobs File Codebook and Delivery Document for AHRQ and NCHS Review |
2/28/2023 | GNRL3143.02: Final Versions of the Codebook and Delivery Document of the FY 2021 Use PUF for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
2/28/2023 | HLTH1074.01: Full-Year 2022 HLTH Basic Edit Specifications |
3/1/2023 | PRPL0185.01: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #4 |
3/2/2023 | ADMN0931.01: FY22 Design changes for ADMN/DEMO |
3/2/2023 | UEGN2960.01: 2021 SBD Reconciliation Table |
3/2/2023 | UEGN2961.01: 2021 Benchmark Tables: Initial Delivery |
3/2/2023 | UEGN3644.01: Delivery of 2021 Final Imputation Files for DN, OM, HHP, HHA, and MVN |
3/7/2023 | EMPL2285.01: Why Employment Data May Not Be Reflected in PUFs |
3/7/2023 | PRPL0186.01: FY2021 COVRUNOS = 91 Editing Decisions |
3/7/2023 | WGTS2121.01: Panel 23 Full Year 2021 SAQ Person Weight review output |
3/9/2023 | INCO0762.01: MEPS HC Income CAPI for FY 2022 |
3/9/2023 | PRPL0185.07: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #4 |
3/9/2023 | UEGN3645.01: Delivery of the 2021 Intermediate Files Before and After MPC Editing |
3/9/2023 | WGTS2120.01: Panel 24 Full Year 2021 SAQ Person Weight review output |
3/10/2023 | GNRL3146.01: HC-227: 2021 Jobs Public Use File Delivery for Web Release |
3/10/2023 | GNRL3147.01: HC-228: Delivery of the Full Year 2021 Use PUF for Web Release |
3/13/2023 | EMPL2284.02: Employment Person-Level Variable & Related Variable Processing Specifications for the Full Year 2022 Population Characteristics/ Consolidated PUFs (Panel 24 Round 7-Round 9/Panel 26 Round 3-Round 5/Panel 27 Round 1-Round 3) – Set 2 |
3/13/2023 | GNRL3145.01: FY 2021 Person-Level Consolidated PUF Variable List Changes for AHRQ Review |
3/14/2023 | EMPL2284.09: Employment Person-Level Variable & Related Variable Processing Specifications for the Full Year 2022 Population Characteristics/ Consolidated PUFs (Panel 24 Round 7-Round 9/Panel 26 Round 3-Round 5/Panel 27 Round 1-Round 3) – Set 2 |
3/14/2023 | PRPL0185.12: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #4 |
3/14/2023 | PRPL0185.15: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #4 |
3/16/2023 | DSDY0071.01: Delivery of the DSDY Variable Specifications FY22 for AHRQ Approval |
3/16/2023 | EMPL2284.13: Employment Person-Level Variable & Related Variable Processing Specifications for the Full Year 2022 Population Characteristics/ Consolidated PUFs (Panel 24 Round 7-Round 9/Panel 26 Round 3-Round 5/Panel 27 Round 1-Round 3) - Set 2 |
3/17/2023 | ACCS0201.01: Access to Care Variable Construction Specifications |
3/17/2023 | HINS1369.01: Delivery of the Basic and Inter-round Edit Specifications for FY22 HINS Panels 24, 26, and 27 |
3/17/2023 | EMPL2284.15: Employment Person-Level Variable & Related Variable Processing Specifications for the Full Year 2022 Population Characteristics/ Consolidated PUFs (Panel 24 Round 7-Round 9/Panel 26 Round 3-Round 5/Panel 27 Round 1-Round 3) – Set 1 |
3/20/2023 | WGTS2083.01: Deriving location Variables (Region and MSA) for Panel 26 Round1 based on GEO FIPS Codes using OMB MSA definitions of both year 2013 and most recent OMG MSA Updates |
3/22/2023 | EMPL2284.16: Employment Person-Level Variable & Related Variable Processing Specifications for the Full Year 2022 Population Characteristics/ Consolidated PUFs (Panel 24 Round 7-Round 9/Panel 26 Round 3-Round 5/Panel 27 Round 1-Round 3) – Set 1 |
3/23/2023 | ACCS0201.03: Access to Care Variable Construction Specifications |
3/23/2023 | HLTH1074.06: Full-Year 2022 HLTH Basic Edit Specifications |
3/24/2023 | DSDY0071.04: Delivery of the DSDY Variable Specifications FY22 for AHRQ Approval |
3/24/2023 | EMPL2284.22: Employment Person-Level Variable & Related Variable Processing Specifications for the Full Year 2022 Population Characteristics/ Consolidated PUFs (Panel 24 Round 7-Round 9/Panel 26 Round 3-Round 5/Panel 27 Round 1-Round 3) – Set 1 |
3/27/2023 | HLTH1073.13: Updated Summary of the MEPS Household Component CAPI and Teleform Changes for HLTH FY2022 and Potential Effect on Data Delivery |
3/28/2023 | WGTS2135.01: Full Year 2021 Combined Panels Consolidated PUF Expenditure Person Weight review output |
3/30/2023 | DSDY0072.01: Delivery of the DSDY Variable Specifications FY21 for AHRQ Approval |
3/30/2023 | HINS1370.01: Delivery of the New/Revised Specifications for the FY2022 Panel 24, Panel 26, and Panel 27 HINS Variables |
3/30/2023 | PCND0169.01: 2022 PCND Constructed Variable Specifications |
3/31/2023 | HINS1369.06: Delivery of the Basic and Inter-round Edit Specifications for FY22 HINS Panels 24, 26, and 27 |
3/31/2023 | PRPL0185.19: Output and Frequencies from 2021 PRPL Program #4 |
4/3/2023 | WGTS2133.01: Panel 24 Full Year 2021: Derivation of Eligibility and Response Indicators for the CPS-like Families |
4/5/2023 | EMPL2286.01: Full Year 2022 Employment Source Variable Editing Specifications |
4/6/2023 | COND1007.01: 2021 Conditions PUF Specifications |
4/6/2023 | DOCM0711.03: Delivery of the 2022 MPC files for Sample selection - Wave 2 |
4/6/2023 | DOCM0712.03: Delivery of the 2022 PC Sample file - Wave 2 |
4/6/2023 | DOCM0713.03: Delivery of the 2022 Provider file for NPI coding - Wave 2 |
4/6/2023 | EMPL2287.01: Delivery of 2021 Covered Person Records for Employment Variable Imputation |
4/6/2023 | PRPL0187.01: Delivery of the FY 2021 OOPELIG2 Dataset for Approval |
4/7/2023 | PRPL0187.06: Delivery of the FY 2021 OOPELIG2 Dataset for Approval |
4/10/2023 | HINS1370.05: Delivery of the New/Revised Specifications for the FY2022 Panel 24, Panel 26, and Panel 27 HINS Variables |
4/11/2023 | EMPL2284.25: Employment Person-Level Variable & Related Variable Processing Specifications for the Full Year 2022 Population Characteristics/ Consolidated PUFs (Panel 24 Round 7-Round 9/Panel 26 Round 3-Round 5/Panel 27 Round 1-Round 3) – Set 1 |
4/11/2023 | GNRL3148.01: NCHS Checklists and Preliminary Versions of Documents for the FY 2021 Non-MPC Event (DV, OM, and HH) PUFs |
4/11/2023 | GNRL3149.01: NCHS Checklist and Preliminary Version of the 2021 Conditions File Delivery Document and Recode Materials for Review |
4/11/2023 | INCO0762.01: Delivery of the 2021 NHIS Link File |
4/11/2023 | UEGN3644.02: Delivery of 2021 Final Imputation Files for ER, HS, MVE, OP and MVN |
4/11/2023 | UEGN2950.01: 2021 Predictive Mean Match Imputation Method Applied to the Expenditure Imputation of the non-MPC Event Types |
4/11/2023 | UEGN2961.02: 2021 Benchmark Tables: Second Delivery |
4/11/2023 | WGTS5052.01: Delivery of the FY 2021 Expenditure File Original Person Weight |
4/12/2023 | GNRL4113.01: Delivery of the File Containing Variables Recoded or Dropped from the USE PUF Due to DRB Review – P23/P24/P25/P26 |
4/12/2023 | WGTS2135.03: Full Year 2021 Combined Panels Consolidated PUF Expenditure Person Weight review output |
4/14/2023 | HLTH1076.01: Full-Year 2022 HLTH Constructed Variable Specifications |
4/14/2023 | UEGN2951.01: 2021 Predictive Mean Matching Imputation Method Applied to the Expenditure Imputation of the MPC Event Types |
4/17/2023 | PCND0169.06: 2022 PCND Constructed Variable Specifications |
4/17/2023 | WGTS5053.01: Delivery of the FY 2021 Expenditure File Final Person Weight – PERWT21F |
4/18/2023 | UEGN3644.03: Delivery of the Final Imputation File for HHA Version 2 |
4/18/2023 | UEPD1229.01: Delivery of the FY2022 PMED Basic Edit specifications |
4/19/2023 | GNRL3150.01: FY 2021 Preliminary Conditions File, Codebook, and Delivery Document |
4/19/2023 | GNRL3151.01: Preliminary Versions of the 2021 Non-MPC Event (DV, OM, and HH) PUF Codebooks and Documents for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
4/19/2023 | GNRL3152.01: 2021 Preliminary Non-MPC Event (DV, OM, and HH) PUF Data Sets |
4/20/2023 | PRPL0188.01: Delivery of the FY 2021 PRPL Hot Deck Imputation Results for Approval |
4/20/2023 | UEGN3646.01: The FY2022 UEGN Basic Edit Specifications - P24/P26/P27 |
4/21/2023 | CODE0946.01: Specifications for the FY 2022 Person-level GEO Coded Address File |
4/21/2023 | CODE0959.01: Condition Coding Progress Report - Week 1 |
4/21/2023 | PRPL0189.01: FY2020 PRPL Premium Inflation Factors for Continuing Employment Coverage |
4/21/2023 | UEGN3641.02: The 2021 Utilization Standard Error Benchmarking Tables Using PERWT21F Weight |
4/25/2023 | GNRL3151.02: Final Versions of the 2021 Non-MPC Event (DV, OM, and HH) PUF Codebooks and Documents for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
4/25/2023 | PRPL0189.02: Redelivery of the FY 2020 OOPELIG3_ENCRYPT Dataset and Benchmarking results |
4/28/2023 | CODE0959.02: Condition Coding Progress Report - Week 2 |
4/28/2023 | EMPL2286.04: Full Year 2022 Employment Source Variable Editing Specifications |
4/28/2023 | EMPL2284.28: Employment Person-Level Variable & Related Variable Processing Specifications for the Full Year 2022 Population Characteristics/ Consolidated PUFs (Panel 24 Round 7-Round 9/Panel 26 Round 3-Round 5/Panel 27 Round 1-Round 3) |
5/2/2023 | WGTS2139.01: MEPS - Full Year 2021 combined panels SAQ expenditure person weight review output |
5/3/2023 | WGTS2154.01: Combined Panels Full Year 2021: Create the MEPS Full Year Person-Level Social Determinant of Health Questionnaire (SDOH) Expenditure Weight Delivery File |
5/4/2023 | PCND0170.01: 2022 PCND Basic Edit Specifications |
5/4/2023 | PRPL0190.01: Editing Probable Duplicate Employment Insurance |
5/5/2023 | ACCS0201.01: 2022 ACCS and COVID Section Basic Edits Specifications |
5/5/2023 | CODE0959.03: Condition Coding Progress Report - Week 2 |
5/5/2023 | GNRL3132.02: HC-223: Delivery of the 2020 Person Round Plan (PRPL) PUF and Related Files for Web Release – Updated |
5/9/2023 | GNRL3153.01: NCHS Checklists and Preliminary Versions of Documents for the FY 2021 MPC Event (IP, ER, OP, OB) PUFs |
5/12/2023 | CODE0959.04: Condition Coding Progress Report - Week 4 |
5/12/2023 | DEMO1020.04: Re-delivery of the MOPID and DAPID Variables for FY2021 |
5/12/2023 | GNRL3154.01: HC-229b, HC-229c, and HC-229h: 2021 Expenditure Event PUFs for Non-MPC Event Types (DV, OM, and HH) and All Related Files for Web Release |
5/15/2023 | COND1008.01: FT 2021 Preliminary CLNK File |
5/15/2023 | EMPL2283.04: 2022 EMPL Kick-Off Meeting, FOLLOW-UP |
5/16/2023 | WGTS2153.01: Full Year 2021 Combined Panels Consolidated PUF SDOH Expenditure Person Weight review output |
5/17/2023 | GNRL3155.01: Preliminary Versions of the 2021 MPC Event (IP, ER, OP, OB) PUF Codebooks and Documents for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
5/17/2023 | GNRL3156.01: Preliminary Versions of the 2021 MPC Event (IP, ER, OP, OB) PUF Data Sets |
5/17/2023 | WGTS2138.01: Individual Panels Full Year 2021: Create the P23 (Rounds 7-9), P24 (Rounds 5-7), P25 (Rounds 3-5), and P26 (Rounds 1-3) Individual Panel Person Expenditure Weight Delivery File |
5/18/2023 | ADMN0941.01: FY22 ADMN/DEMO Constructed Variable Specs |
5/18/2023 | EMPL2288.01: Report on MEPS Wage Top Code Practices |
5/18/2023 | UEPD1230.02: Delivery of the 2021 PMED PUF (RX21V01 and RX21V02) |
5/18/2023 | UEPD1230.03: Delivery of 2021 PMED PUF (TC21XTABS.lst, TC21XTABS.xlsx) |
5/19/2023 | CODE0959.05: Condition Coding Progress Report - Week 5 |
5/22/2023 | WGTS2143.01: Panel 23 Full Year 2021 SAQ Expenditure Person Weight review output |
5/23/2023 | GNRL3155.02: Final Versions of the 2021 MPC Event (IP, ER, OP, OB) PUF Codebooks and Documents for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
5/23/2023 | PCND0170.05: 2022 PCND Basic Edit Specifications |
5/23/2023 | WGTS2147.01: Full Year 2021 Consolidated PUF Family Weight review output |
5/24/2023 | WGTS5054.01: Delivery of the 2021 Food Security Weight – FSWT |
5/26/2023 | CODE0959.06: Condition Coding Progress Report - Week 6 |
5/26/2023 | WGTS5055.01: Delivery of the FY 2021 SDOH Expenditure Person Weight – SDOHWT21F |
5/30/2023 | PCND0170.09: 2022 PCND Basic Edit Specifications |
5/30/2023 | WGTS2141.01: Panel 25 Full Year 2021 SAQ Expenditure Person Weight review output |
5/30/2023 | WGTS5056.01: Delivery of the Individual Panel Raked Person Weights for P23/P24/P25/P26 FY21 |
6/1/2023 | CODE0960.01: PMED Matching Programs LOG and LST Files for FY22 Wave 1 |
6/1/2023 | PRPL0191.01: Delivery of the FY 2021 OOPELIG3 Dataset, Benchmarking results, POSTIMPFIN results for final approval of OOPPREM variables, the Preliminary Encrypted Delivery Dataset, and the Preliminary Unencrypted Delivery Dataset |
6/1/2023 | WGTS2142.01: Panel 24 Full Year 2021 SAQ Expenditure Person Weight review output |
6/2/2023 | CODE0959.07: Condition Coding Progress Report - Week 7 |
6/2/2023 | WGTS2145.01: Full Year 2021 Consolidated PUF DCS Expenditure Person Weight review output |
6/5/2023 | ADMN0941.02: FY22 ADMN Constructed Variable Specs - Updated version |
6/5/2023 | WGTS2140.01: MEPS - Panel 26 Full Year 2021 SAQ Expenditure Person Weight review output |
6/7/2023 | GNRL4101.02: Addendum to the FY 2023 (Panel 23, Panel 24, Panel 25 and Panel 26) Delivery Database Snapshots: Edited Segments since the Previous Delivery of 1/11/23 |
6/7/2023 | PRPL0191.05: Delivery of the FY 2021 OOPELIG3 Dataset, Benchmarking results, POSTIMPFIN results for final approval of OOPPREM variables, the Preliminary Encrypted Delivery Dataset, and the Preliminary Unencrypted Delivery Dataset |
6/8/2023 | UEPD1230.07: Delivery of the 2021 PMED PUF: pregnancy related confidentiality risks |
6/8/2023 | UEPD1230.08: Delivery of 2021 PMED PUF (RX21V05X) SAS dataset and the format files (RX21V05X.sas7bcat, rx21v05xf.sas and rxexpf2.sas) |
6/9/2023 | CODE0959.08: Condition Coding Progress Report - Week 8 |
6/9/2023 | GNRL3157.01: HC-229d, HC-229e, HC-229f, and HC-229g: 2021 Expenditure Event PUFs for MPC Event Types (IP, ER, OP, and OB) and All Related Files for Web Release |
6/9/2023 | PCND0171.01: 2021 Priority Conditions Benchmarking Table |
6/9/2023 | PRPL0191.10: Delivery of the FY 2021 OOPELIG3 Dataset, Benchmarking results, POSTIMPFIN results for final approval of OOPPREM variables, the Preliminary Encrypted Delivery Dataset, and the Preliminary Unencrypted Delivery Dataset |
6/9/2023 | UEPD1230.09: Redelivery of the 2021 PMED PUF (RX21V05X) SAS dataset |
6/12/2023 | WGTS5057.01: Delivery of the Poverty-Adjusted Family Level Weight, CPS Like Family Level Weight, Poverty-Adjusted DCS and SAQ Weights for FY2021 |
6/13/2023 | GNRL3158.01: NCHS Checklist and Preliminary Version of the 2021 Food Security File Delivery Document for Review |
6/13/2023 | GNRL3159.01: FY2022 Person-Level Use PUF Variable List Changes for AHRQ Review |
6/13/2023 | GNRL3160.01: NCHS Checklist and Preliminary Version of Delivery Document for the FY 2021 Prescribed Medicines (PMED) PUF |
6/13/2023 | UEGN2962.01: 2022 Specs for Proposed Changes in Creating an ERHSFLAG and SBD Data File Associated with MPC linked ER and HS events |
6/13/2023 | WGTS5058.01: Delivery of the Individual Panel 23, Panel 24, Panel 25 and Panel 26 SAQ Expenditure Weight for FY2021 |
6/14/2023 | UEPD1230.10: Deliver the 2021 PMED PUF data (RX21V06.sas7bdat) and the format files (RX21V06.sas7bcat, rxexpv06f.sas and rxexpv06f2.sas) |
6/16/2023 | CODE0959.09: Condition Coding Progress Report - Week 9 |
6/16/2023 | INCO0763.01: Delivery of the 2022 NHIS Link File |
6/21/2023 | GNRL3161.01: Preliminary Versions of the 2021 Prescribed Medicines (PMED) Event PUF Codebook and Delivery Document for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
6/21/2023 | GNRL3162.01: Preliminary Versions of 2021 Food Security File Codebook and Delivery Document |
6/21/2023 | GNRL3163.01: Preliminary Version of the 2021 PMED Event PUF Data Set |
6/21/2023 | GNRL3164.01: HC230: Preliminary Version of the 2021 Food Security Data Set |
6/21/2023 | UEGN 2962.02: 2022 Specs for Proposed Changes in Creating an ERHSFLAG and SBD Data File Associated with MPC linked ER and HS events |
6/22/2023 | PRPL0192.01: Comparison of 2020 and 2021 PRPL PUF datasets |
6/23/2023 | CODE0959.10: Condition Coding Progress Report - Week 10 |
6/23/2023 | PRPL0192.02: Comparison of 2020 and 2021 PRPL PUF datasets |
6/26/2023 | GNRL3159.02: FY2022 Person-Level Use PUF Variable List Changes for AHRQ Review |
6/27/2023 | GNRL3161.02: Final Versions of the 2021 Prescribed Medicines (PMED) Event PUF Delivery Document and Codebook for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
6/27/2023 | GNRL4116.01: Delivery of the Single Round Data Exchange (SRD) for Panel 24 Round 9 |
6/27/2023 | GNRL4117.01: Delivery of the Single Round Data Exchange (SRD) for Panel 26 Round 5 |
6/27/2023 | GNRL4121.01: GNRL4121.02: Delivery of the RU-Level End-Of-Round Files - P24R9/P26R5 |
6/27/2023 | GNRL4122.01: GNRL4122.02: Delivery of the Person-Level End-Of-Round Files - P24R9/P26R5 |
6/27/2023 | UEGN3647.01: Delivery of the Dropped Variables Due to DRB Review – FY21 EXP PUFs for ER, OP, OB, IP, DV, and RX |
6/29/2023 | COND1010.01: Delivery: 2022 Conditions Basic Edit Specifications |
6/30/2023 | CODE0959.11: Condition Coding Progress Report - Week 11 |
7/7/2023 | CODE0959.12: Conditions Coding Progress Report - Week 12 |
7/7/2023 | FOOD0012.01: FY22 Food Security design change memo (No Changes) |
7/11/2023 | GNRL3165.01: NCHS Checklist and Preliminary Version of the Delivery Document for the Full Year 2021 Consolidated Data PUF |
7/11/2023 | GNRL3168.01: NCHS Checklist and Preliminary Version of Delivery Document for the Full Year 2021 Person-Round-Plan (PRPL) PUF |
7/12/2023 | COND1010.03: Delivery: 2022 Conditions Basic Edit Specifications |
7/12/2023 | INCO0764.01: Westat Delivery of Industry and Occupation Coding File for 2022 MEPS |
7/13/2023 | UEGN3648.01: The 2021/2020 QC Finding Tables of the PUF Event Expenditures |
7/14/2023 | DOCM0711.04: Delivery of the 2022 MPC files for Sample selection - Wave 3 |
7/14/2023 | DOCM0712.04: Delivery of the 2022 PC Sample file - Wave 3 |
7/14/2023 | DOCM0713.04: Delivery of the 2022 Provider file for NPI coding - Wave 3 |
7/14/2023 | GNRL3166.01: HC-229a: Delivery of the 2021 Prescribed Medicines (PMED) PUF and all Related Files for Web Release |
7/14/2023 | GNRL3167.01: HC-230: Delivery of the 2021 Food Security PUF and Related Files for Web Release |
7/14/2023 | GNRL3169.01: HC233: Preliminary Version of the 2021 Consolidated File |
7/17/2023 | UEGN3649.01: The Telehealth Visit Type Other Specify Text Strings Recoding for FY2022 |
7/19/2023 | GNRL3170.01: FY 2021 Person-Round-Plan PUF Preliminary Versions of Codebook and Delivery Document for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
7/19/2023 | GNRL3171.01: Preliminary Version of the 2021 Person-Round-Plan (PRPL) PUF Data Set |
7/19/2023 | GNRL3172.01: Preliminary Version of the 2021 Appendix to the Event PUFs Delivery Document, and Codebooks for Review |
7/19/2023 | GNRL3173.01: HC229I: Preliminary Version of the 2021 Appendix to the Event PUFs Data Sets |
7/19/2023 | GNRL3174.01: Full Year 2021 Conditions PUF Preliminary Versions of Codebook and Delivery Document for Use in AHRQ Review |
7/19/2023 | GNRL3175.01: HC231: Preliminary Version of the 2021 Conditions Data Set |
7/19/2023 | GNRL3176.01: Preliminary Versions of the Codebook and Document for the FY 2021 Consolidated Data PUF for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
7/21/2023 | CODE0961.01: Prescribed Medicine Coding Progress Report - First Report - Weeks 1 – 3 |
7/21/2023 | UEGN3650.01: The FY2022 Initial Variable Construction Specifications |
7/25/2023 | GNRL3170.02: FY 2021 Person-Round-Plan PUF Final Versions of Codebook and Delivery Document for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
7/25/2023 | GNRL3174.02: Full Year 2021 Conditions PUF Final Versions of Codebook and Delivery Document for Use in AHRQ Review |
7/25/2023 | GNRL3176.02: Final Versions of the Codebook and Document for the FY 2021 Consolidated Data PUF for Use in AHRQ and NCHS Review |
7/26/2023 | GNRL3177.01: Final Versions of the 2021 Appendix to the Event PUFs Delivery Document, Codebook, and Dataset for AHRQ Review |
7/28/2023 | CODE0961.02: Prescribed Medicine Coding Progress Report - Week 4 |
7/28/2023 | GNRL4118.01: Delivery of the Single Round Data Exchange (SRD) for Panel 27 Round 3 |
7/28/2023 | GNRL4121.03 and GNRL4122.03: Delivery of End-Of-Round files (RU-Level and Person-Level) -P27R3 |
8/1/2023 | FOOD0013.01: Full-Year 2022 Food Security Basic Edit Specifications |
8/1/2023 | FOOD0013.03: Full-Year 2022 Food Security Basic Edit Specifications |
8/1/2023 | HINS1380.01: HINS_B42 editing rules |
8/2/2023 | EMPL2284.29: 2022 MEPS Wage Top Coding |
8/2/2023 | UEGN3651.01: The DN Text Strings Recoding for FY2022 |
8/4/2023 | CODE0961.03: Prescribed Medicine Coding Progress Report - Week 5 |
8/4/2023 | CODE0963.01: Attachment A State-Specific Sopcodes DY2022.xlsx |
8/4/2023 | DOCM0715.01: File of Provider Names for FY 2022 |
8/7/2023 | CODE0962.01: MEPS Delivery of the ICD-10-CM/CCSR Crosswalk and COND Coding Uncodeable Text Strings for FY22 |
8/8/2023 | COND1011.01: 2022 Preliminary Conditions File Specifications |
8/9/2023 | UEGN3652.01: Question About Editing an Open Event Case |
8/11/2023 | CODE0961.04: Prescribed Medicine Coding Progress Report - Week 6 |
8/11/2023 | EMPL2289.01: 2022 Wage Outlier Editing Process Specification |
8/11/2023 | GNRL3178.01: HC-233: Full Year 2021 Consolidated Use, Expense, and Insurance PUF Delivery for Web Release |
8/11/2023 | GNRL3179.01: HC-229I: Delivery of the Final Appendix to the 2021 Event Files and all Related Files for Web Release |
8/11/2023 | GNRL3180.01: HC-231: Delivery of the Final 2021 Conditions File and All Related Files for Web Release |
8/11/2023 | GNRL3181.01: HC-232: Delivery of the 2021 Person Round Plan (PRPL) PUF and Related Files for Web Release |
8/11/2023 | UEGN3629.02: The Machine Learning Imputation Test Files Version 2 |
8/14/2023 | EMPL2290.01: Implementation of EM BOX_350 in Fall 2023 |
8/17/2023 | ACCS0202.01: 2022 ACCS Other Specify Text String Recoding |
8/18/2023 | CODE0961.05: Prescribed Medicine Coding Progress Report - Week 7 |
8/25/2023 | GNRL4119.01: Delivery of the Single Round Data Exchange (SRD) for Panel 28 Round 1 |
8/25/2023 | GNRL4121.04 and GNRL4122.04: Delivery of End-Of-Round files (RU-Level and Person-Level) -P28R1 |
8/28/2023 | COND1011.04: 2022 Preliminary Conditions File Specifications |
8/28/2023 | WGTS2101.01: New Weighting Memo #2101.01_Do_Not_Email: Derivation of the MEPS Panel 23 Full Year 2021 Person Weights (Rounds 7-9) |
8/30/2023 | WGTS2132.01: NEW Weighting Memo #2132.01: Panel 25 Full Year 2021: Derivation of Eligibility and Response Indicators for the CPS-like Families |
8/30/2023 | WGTS2141.01: New Weighting Memo #2141.01: Panel 25 Full Year 2021: Developing MEPS Person-Level Self-Administered Questionnaire (SAQ) Expenditure Weights |
8/30/2023 | WGTS2085.01: New Weighting Memo #2085.01: MEPS Panel 26 Round 1 - DU Level Weights |
8/31/2023 | DOCM1002.31: 2022 Westat Pharmacy Profiles DOCM1002.31 |
9/1/2023 | DOCM0716.01: MEPS – 2022 Conditions Authority File After the 2022 HC Condition Coding |
9/1/2023 | UEGN3653.01: Specifications for the 2022 Pre-Imputation UEGN Files |
9/7/2023 | DOCM1002.33: 2022 Westat Pharmacy Profiles DOCM1002.33 |
9/8/2023 | HINS1381.01: Delivery of the P2722 EPCP Cross-tabs, with additional requested tables |
9/11/2023 | COND1011.08: 2022 Preliminary Conditions File Specifications |
9/12/2023 | HINS1381.06: Delivery of the P2722 EPCP Cross-tabs, with additional requested tables |
9/14/2023 | DOCM1002.35: 2022 Westat Pharmacy Profiles DOCM1002.35 |
9/15/2023 | EMPL2291.01: FY2022 JOBS File Specifications for Approval |
9/15/2023 | UEGN3654.01: The 2022 Utilization Count Variables Construction Specification |
9/15/2023 | UEPD1231.01: Delivery of 2022 PMED Pre-imp files spec |
9/18/2023 | UEGN2964.01: 2022 Specifications for Creating an ER-HS Link on Unmatched HC Events |
9/19/2023 | PRPL0193.01: Full Year 2022 PRPL File Revisions to Coverage Record and HMO Variables, JOBS Linking, and Post-Linking Editing |
9/21/2023 | DOCM1002.37: 2022 Westat Pharmacy Profiles DOCM1002.37 |
9/21/2023 | HINS1382.01 and HINS1383.01: Delivery of the P2622 and P2422 EPCP Cross-tabs, with additional requested tables |
9/22/2023 | EMPL2289.09: 2022 Wage Outlier Editing Process Specification |
9/24/2023 | CODE0964.01: Delivery of the Coded FY2022 Industry and Occupation Files |
9/25/2023 | CODE0965.02: MEPS 2022 Delivery of PMED Final Reports for Uncodeable, Compounds, Foreign Meds, No-MDDB, Drug Groupings |
9/25/2023 | HLTH1077.01: COVID Vaccine Constructed Variables Dataset |
9/25/2023 | WGTS3001.01: NEW Weighting Memo # 3001.01 Combined Panels Full Year 2022: Derive Location Variables (Region and MSA) Based On Geo FIPS Codes, Using OMB MSA definitions of Both Year 2013 and the Current (2023) Year |
9/27/2023 | DOCM0718.01: Delivery of 2022 Static Tables for SOP After the 2022 HC SOP Coding |
9/27/2023 | EMPL2289.14: 2022 Wage Outlier Editing Process Specification |
9/27/2023 | HINS1384.01: HINS Panel 27 Rounds 1-3 At Any Time/At Interview Date/At 12/31/22 Variables |
9/27/2023 | UEPD1231.04: Delivery of 2022 PMED Pre-imp files spec |
9/29/2023 | CODE0965.02: MEPS 2022 Delivery of PMED Final Reports for Uncodeable, Compounds, Foreign Meds, No-MDDB, Drug Groupings |
10/4/2023 | UEGN2963.01: 2022 Specifications for Processing Flat-Fee Bundles |
10/4/2023 | UEGN2965.01: 2022 Specifications for SBD Disavowal Imputation |
10/5/2023 | DOCM1002.39: 2022 Westat Pharmacy Profiles DOCM1002.39 |
10/5/2023 | PRPL0193.10: Full Year 2022 PRPL File Revisions to Coverage Record and HMO Variables, JOBS Linking, and Post-Linking Editing |
10/6/2023 | EMPL2291.04: FY2022 JOBS File Specifications for Approval |
10/6/2023 | HLTH1077.02: COVID Vaccine Constructed Variables Dataset |
10/6/2023 | PRPL0193.17: Full Year 2022 PRPL File Revisions to Coverage Record and HMO Variables, JOBS Linking, and Post-Linking Editing |
10/9/2023 | HINS1385.01 and HINS1386.01: HINS Panel 26 Rounds 3-5 and HINS Panel 24 Rounds 7-9 At Any Time/At Interview Date/At 12/31/22 Variables |
10/9/2023 | UEGN2970.01: 2022 Specifications for Imputing SBD nodes for hospital events where a provider used a patient’s account |
10/10/2023 | PRPL0193.21: Full Year 2022 PRPL File Revisions to Coverage Record and HMO Variables, JOBS Linking, and Post-Linking Editing |
10/12/2023 | DOCM1002.41: 2022 Westat Pharmacy Profiles DOCM1002.41 |
10/13/2023 | DOCM0719.01: Delivery of 2022 Static Tables for SRCS After the 2022 HC SRCS Coding |
10/13/2023 | PRPL0193.32: Full Year 2022 PRPL File Revisions to Coverage Record and HMO Variables, JOBS Linking, and Post-Linking Editing |
10/13/2023 | HINS1384.02: Redelivery of HINS Panel 27 Rounds 1-3 At Any Time/At Interview Date/At 12/31/22 Variables |
10/13/2023 | WGTS2107.01: NEW Weighting Memo #2107.01 - Combined Panels Full Year 2021: Adjust the MEPS Full Year Person Use Weight to Better Reflect those who Died or Spent Part of the Year in a Nursing Home |
10/13/2023 | WGTS2112.01: NEW Weighting Memo #2112.01 - Panel 24 Full Year 2021: Developing the MEPS Person-Level Social Determinant of Health Questionnaire (SDOH) Use Weights |
10/13/2023 | WGTS2113.01: NEW Weighting Memo #2113.01 - Panel 23 Full Year 2021: Developing the MEPS Person-Level Social Determinant of Health Questionnaire (SDOH) Use Weights |
10/13/2023 | WGTS2122.01: NEW Weighting Memo #2122.01 - Combined Panels Full Year 2021: Derivation of the MEPS Full Year Person-Level Self-Administered Questionnaire (SAQ) Use Weights for the Population Characteristics Public Use File |
10/13/2023 | WGTS2140.01: NEW Weighting Memo #2140.01 - Panel 26 Full Year 2021: Developing the MEPS Person-Level Self-Administered Questionnaire (SAQ) Expenditure Weights |
10/13/2023 | WGTS5059.01: Delivery of the ADMN/DEMO Variables Used for Weights Development for FY22 (P24, P26, and P27) |
10/18/2023 | DOCM0717.01: Delivery of the 2022 HC pre-matching file |
10/18/2023 | EMPL2291.07: FY2022 JOBS File Specifications for Approval |
10/20/2023 | UEGN2974.01: 2022 Specifications for Initializing MPSAMTs |
10/23/2023 | HLTH1077.14: COVID Vaccine Constructed Variables Dataset |
10/24/2023 | WGTS2103.01: New Weighting Memo #2103.01: Derivation of the annualized MEPS Families and Identification of the Responding MEPS Families for the Panel 25 Full Year 2021 |
10/24/2023 | WGTS2105.01: New Weighting Memo # 2105.01 - Derivation of the annualized MEPS Families and Identification of the Responding MEPS Families for the Panel 23 Full Year 2021 |
10/25/2023 | CODE0966.01: Delivery of the 2022 PMED Authority File and Files for Matching Programs after PMED Coding |
10/26/2023 | UEGN2967.01: 2022 Specifications for Preparing Prior Year Donors |
10/26/2023 | UEGN2968.01: 2022 HHA Duplicate Rollups |
10/27/2023 | CODE0967.01: Delivery of 2022 Static Table for WHOBILL After the 2022 HC WHOBILL Coding |
10/31/2023 | EMPL2292.01: FY2022 Panel 27 Editing of High Wage Outliers, Substantially Different, or Multiple Extreme Wages – Request for Approval |
10/31/2023 | EMPL2293.01: FY2022 Panel 27 Editing of Low Wage Outliers or Wages that Do Not Change – Request for Approval |
10/31/2023 | WGTS3001-2022-FYLOC: NEW Weighting Memo: 3001-2022-FYLOC - Combined Panels Full Year 2022: Derive Location Variables (Region and MSA) Based On Geo FIPS Codes and Using OMB MSA definitions of Both Year 2013 and the Current (2023) Year |
10/31/2023 | WGTS3002-2022-CPSMAR: NEW Weighting Memo: 3002-2022-CPSMAR - MEPS Computation of the Person and Family Poststratification Control Totals for March 2023 from the March 2023 CPS (including the poverty level variable) |
10/31/2023 | WGTS3003-2022-CPSDEC: NEW Weighting Memo: 3003-2022-CPSDEC - MEPS Computation of the Person and Family Poststratification Control Totals for December 2022 from the March 2023 CPS (including the poverty level variable) |
10/31/2023 | WGTS3015-2022-P27FAMID: NEW Weighting Memo: 3015-2022-P27FAMID - Derivation of the Annualized MEPS Families and Identification of the Responding MEPS Families for MEPS Panel 27 Full Year 2022 |
10/31/2023 | WGTS3017-2022-P24FAMID: NEW Weighting Memo: 3017-2022-P24FAMID - Panel 24 Full Year 2022: Derivation of the Annualized MEPS Families and Identification of the Responding MEPS Families |
11/2/2023 | UEGN #s 2971.01 and 2976.01: 2022 Specifications for Mom-Baby Linking and MPC Rolling Event Edits |
11/3/2023 | DOCM0720.01: Delivery of Person-Level Base and Family Pseudo Weight for FY22 |
11/3/2023 | EMPL2294.02: FY 2022 Wage Imputation Specification |
11/3/2023 | UEGN2972.01:2022 Specification for Total Charge Imputation |
11/6/2023 | EMPL2291.08: FY2022 JOBS File Specifications for Approval |
11/6/2023 | UEGN #s 2973.01 and 2977.01: 2022 Specifications for Post-PMM Expenditure Imputation and HHA Rolling Event Edits |
11/6/2023 | WGTS5060.01: Delivery of Person-Level Base Weight, Individual Panel Base Weight, Family Membership Flag, and MSA variables for FY22 (P24, P26, and P27) |
11/7/2023 | HINS1387.01: Results of the QC Cross Tabs for the HINS 2022 HMO/Gatekeeper FY variables |
11/8/2023 | EMPL2295.01: FY2022 Panel 24 Editing of High Wage Outliers, Substantially Different, or Multiple Extreme Wages – Request for Approval |
11/8/2023 | EMPL2296.01: FY2022 Panel 24 Editing of Low Wage Outliers or Wages that Do Not Change – Request for Approval |
11/9/2023 | DSDY0073.01: Delivery of the DSDY “Missed Days” top code values for AHRQ approval |
11/9/2023 | EMPL2292.02: FY2022 Panel 27 Editing of High Wage Outliers, Substantially Different, or Multiple Extreme Wages – Request for Approval |
11/9/2023 | EMPL2292.08: FY2022 Panel 27 Editing of High Wage Outliers, Substantially Different, or Multiple Extreme Wages – Request for Approval |
11/10/2023 | HINS1388.01: Additional updates to the HINS 2022 Benchmarking data for panels 24 and 27 |
11/10/2023 | UEGN #s 2978.01 and 2979.01: 2022 Specifications for Last Step Edits and Rolling Events Before Edits |
11/13/2023 | COND1012.01: 2022 CLNK File Specifications |
11/13/2023 | EMPL2297.01: FY2022 Panel 26 Editing of High Wage Outliers, Substantially Different, or Multiple Extreme Wages – Request for Approval |
11/13/2023 | EMPL2298.01: FY2022 Panel 26 Editing of Low Wage Outliers or Wages that Do Not Change – Request for Approval |
11/13/2023 | HLTH1078.01: 2022 BMI Cross-tabulations and Frequencies |
11/13/2023 | PRPL0194.01: FY22 PRPL Specifications Coverage Record and HMO Variables, JOBS Link and Variable Editing, and Variable Editing: Post JOBS Linking |
11/15/2023 | DOCM0721.01: MEPS - Data Destruction - NHIS 2019 Sample Files |
11/15/2023 | HLTH1078.02: 2022 BMI Cross-tabulations and Frequencies BMI dataset |
11/15/2023 | WGTS: 3016-2022-P26FAMID: New Weighting Memo - 3016-2022-P26FAMID - Derivation for the Annualized MEPS Families and Identification of the Responding MEPS Families for the Panel 26 Full Year 2022 |
11/17/2023 | EMPL2297.05: FY2022 Employment Wage Outlier Reviews – Responses to AHRQ’s questions |
11/17/2023 | HLTH1078.09: 2022 BMI Cross-tabulations and Frequencies BMI dataset |
11/17/2023 | UEGN # 2975.01 and 2988.01: 2022 HC Edits and MPC Edits |
11/17/2023 | WGTS: 3005-2022-CPSSAQ: New Weighting Memo - 3005-2022-CPSSAQ - Creation of CPS Control Total Files Containing the Raking Dimensions for the Full Year 2022 Self-Administered Questionnaire (SAQ) Use and Expenditure Person Weight |
11/20/2023 | EMPL2299.01: Approval of Weighted NUMEMP Medians for Panel 24 Round 7-9, Panel 26 Round 3-5, and Panel 27 Round 1-3 of FY 2022 |
11/20/2023 | PRPL0194.02: FY22 PRPL Specifications Coverage Record and HMO Variables, JOBS Link and Variable Editing, and Variable Editing: Post JOBS Linking |
11/20/2023 | PRPL0194.05: FY22 PRPL Specifications Coverage Record and HMO Variables, JOBS Link and Variable Editing, and Variable Editing: Post JOBS Linking |
11/21/2023 | FOOD0014.01: Full-Year 2022 Food Security PUF Constructed Variables and Labels |
11/21/2023 | UEGN # 2980.01 and 2981.01: 2022 Specifications for Imputing Expenditures for Capitated Events and for Preparing SBD Nodes for Editing |
11/21/2023 | UEGN3655.01: Deliver to AHRQ for approval specifications for the FY22 non-MPC (DN, OM, and HH) Expenditure Event files |
11/22/2023 | ADMN0951.01: FY22 Weighted Crosstabs delivery of ADMN and DEMO variables |
11/22/2023 | UEPD1231.02: 2022 (Panel 24 & 26 & 27) Household Prescribed Medicine and Associated Files - Set 1 |
11/28/2023 | COND1012.04: 2022 CLNK File Specifications |
11/30/2023 | EMPL2300.01: FY 2022 Hourly Wage Imputation Output - Failure Requiring Decision |
11/30/2023 | UEGN #s 2976.02 and 2982.01: 2022 Specifications for MPC Rolling Event Edits and for Attaching SBD Expenditures to Facility Events |
11/30/2023 | WGTS: 2090.01: New Weighting Memo - WGTS: 2090.01: Delivery File Providing a Linkage between the Person Records Sampled for MEPS Panel 26 and the Person Records in the 2020 NHIS Weights File |
12/4/2023 | EMPL2300.02: FY 2022 Hourly Wage Imputation Output for Approval |
12/6/2023 | UEGN2989.01: 2022 Listing of Events with Questionable HC Reported Expenditures |
12/6/2023 | WGTS3002.01: March 2023 CPS (ASEC) estimates and December 2022 control totals review output |
12/6/2023 | WGTS 3027-2022-FYVAR: Combined Panels Full Year 2022: Establishing Variance Estimation Strata and PSUs, and Estimating Standard Errors Using SUDAAN for the MEPS Full Year Public Use Files |
12/7/2023 | UEGN3657.01: Delivery of the FY22 Pre-Imputation files |
12/7/2023 | WGTS5061.01: Delivery of the Variance Strata and PSU Variables for FY2022 |
12/7/2023 | WGTS3022.01: Panel 27 Full Year 2022 SAQ Population Characteristics Person Weight review output |
12/7/2023 | WGTS3024.01: Panel 24 Full Year 2022 SAQ Person Weight review output |
12/7/2023 | UEGN#s 2976.05 and 2982.04: 2022 Specifications for MPC Rolling Event Edits and for Attaching SBD Expenditures to Facility Events |
12/8/2023 | DOCM0722.01: 2023 MPC sample file specs |
12/8/2023 | DOCM0723.01: 2023 PC sample file specs |
12/8/2023 | DOCM0724.01: 2023 provider file for NPI coding specs |
12/8/2023 | GNRL3182.01: Preliminary Version of the 2022 Full-Year Population Characteristics PUF Dataset |
12/8/2023 | WGTS3006.01: Panel 27 Full Year 2022 Use Person Weight review output |
12/8/2023 | WGTS3023.01: Panel 26 Full Year 2022 SAQ Person Weight review output |
12/12/2023 | EMPL2303.01: High Hourly Wage Outlier in Upcoming Delivery of Pre-Top Coded Wage Dataset |
12/11/2023 | PRPL0194.11: FY22 PRPL Specifications Coverage Record and HMO Variables, JOBS Link and Variable Editing, and Variable Editing: Post JOBS Linking |
12/11/2023 | WGTS3014.01: Panel 24 Full Year 2022 Person Weight review output |
12/11/2023 | WGTS3025.01: Full Year 2022 Combined Panels Population Characteristics PUF SAQ Person Weight review output |
12/12/2023 | GNRL3183.01: Delivery of Data Reference Year PowerPoint Slide (2020 – 2023) |
12/13/2023 | EMPL2301.01: Full Year 2022 Wage Top Code Value for AHRQ Approval |
12/13/2023 | WGTS3019.01: Full Year 2022 Person Weights Nursing Home and Mortality Adjustment review output |
12/14/2023 | DEMO1021.01: Delivery of the Output Listings for Case Review of the MOPID and DAPID Variables’ Construction for FY2022 |
12/14/2023 | UEGN36560.1: Delivery of the 2021 Post-Imputation Files for the MEPS Master Files |
12/14/2023 | UEPD1231.03: 2022 (Panel 24 & 26 & 27) PMED Supplemental File - Set 2: Person-Level File and Additional 3 Segment Variable Files |
12/15/2023 | HLTH0790.01: 2020 PSAQ Completion year redelivery |
12/20/2023 | EMPL2302.01: Full Year 2022 Jobs File Establishment Size Top Code Value and Extent of Job Record Wage Top Coding for AHRQ Approval |
12/20/2023 | UEPD1231.04: 2022 (Panel 24 & 26 & 27) PMED Supplemental File - set 3: Person/Round-Level Files |
12/20/2023 | WGTS5062.01: Delivery of the SAQ Use PUF Weight and Individual Panel SAQ Weight Variables for FY2022 |
12/21/2023 | UEGN3658.01: Feedback on the RTI’s FY2022 HHA Test Files |
12/21/2023 | WGTS3020.01: Full Year 2022 Combined Panels Population Characteristics PUF Person Weight review output |
12/22/2023 | INCO0765.01: Delivery of the 2022 Income File |
12/26/2023 | UEGN2975.03: 2022 HC Edit Specs |
12/26/2023 | UEGN 2991.01: 2022 Listing of MVN Events with Questionable HC Reported Expenditures |
12/26/2023 | WGTS3010-2022-P26USE1: New Weighting Memo #3010-2022-P26USE1 - Panel 26 Full Year 2022: Creation of the Master Weighting File and Edit Checks for the MEPS Person Use Weights (Rounds 3-5) |
12/26/2023 | WGTS3025-2022-FYUSESAQ: New MEPS Memo #3025-2022-FYUSESAQ - Combined Panels Full Year 2022: Derivation of the MEPS Full Year Person-Level Self-Administered Questionnaire (SAQ) Use Weights for the Population Characteristics Public Use File |
12/26/2023 | WGTS3026-2022-FYUSESAQ_DVL: New Weighting Memo #3026-2022-FYUSESAQ_DLV - Combined Panels Full Year 2022: Create the MEPS Full Year Person-Level Self-Administered Questionnaire (SAQ) Use Weights Delivery File |
12/26/2023 | WGTS3011.01: 3011-2022-P26USE2- Panel 26 Full Year 2022: Derivation of the Initial MEPS Person Use Weight (Rounds 3-5) AND 3012-2022-P26USE3- Panel 26 Full Year 2022: Nonresponse Adjustment for the Initial MEPS Person Use Weight (Rounds 3-5) |
12/27/2023 | HINS1389.01: Delivery of the HINS Ever Insured in FY 2022 variables LASTAGE and INSCV922 to be added to the internal “MEPS Master Files” |
12/27/2023 | HINS1390.01: Delivery of the FY 2022 HINS Medicare Part D Supplemental Variables |
12/27/2023 | WGTS5063.01: Delivery of Person-Level Use PUF Weight, Single Panel Person Weight, and MSA22_13 Variables for FY22 |
12/28/2023 | UEGN3659.01: Deliver to AHRQ for approval specifications for the FY22 MPC (OB, OP, ER, and IP) Expenditure Event files |
12/29/2023 | HINS1391.01: Delivery of the 2022 HINS Month-by-Month, Tricare plan, Private, Medicare, and Medicaid HMO/Gatekeeper, and PMEDIN/DENTIN Variables |