MEPS HC-012: 1996 Full Year Consolidated Data File 
              April 2001  
Agency for Healthcare Research and   Quality 
Center for Cost and Financing Studies 
2101 East Jefferson Street, Suite 501 
Rockville, MD 20852 
(301) 594-1406
         
        User Note      
        
         This file consolidates all of the final 1996 person-level variables onto one file.  This file supercedes  files HC-002, HC-003, HC-004, HC-008 and HC-011, as well as the October 2000 version of HC-012.  Revisions incorporated in this version of HC-012 include the addition of summary yearly health  insurance variables and updated prescribed drug and total expenditure data.  MEPS collects data at  the "event" (hospitalization, doctor visit, medication purchase/obtainment) level.  Expenses  associated with each event are summed to create the person-level totals available on this file.  Due  to differences in rounding, expenditure totals from this file may not be identical to totals calculated  from the 1996 event-level files (HC-010A through HC-010H).  See the 1996 Appendix File (HC-010I) for additional information on rounding.     
         TABLE OF  CONTENTS 
        
  A. Data Use Agreement  
  B. Background  
  1.0 Household Component  
  2.0 Medical Provider Component  
  3.0 Insurance Component  
  4.0 Nursing Home Component  
  5.0 Survey Management
  C. Technical and Programming Information 
  1.0 General Information  
  2.0 Data File Description  
  2.1 Codebook Structure  
  2.2 Reserved Codes  
  2.3 Codebook Format  
  2.4 Variable Naming  
  3.0 Data File Contents  
  3.1	Survey Administration Variables (DUID-RURSLT3)  
  3.2 Demographic and Family Relationship Variables (AGE1X-DADPID2X)  
          3.3 Income and Tax Filing Variables (SSIDISAB-REFDIMP)  
          3.4 Employment Variables (EMPST1-YCHJB231)  
          3.5 Insurance Variables  
          3.6 Pregnancy Indicator Variables (PREGRD1-BIRTH96)  
          3.7 Disability Days Indicator Variables (DDNOWRK1-OTHNMDD3)  
          3.8 Access to Care Variables (ACCELIG2-OTHRPRO2)  
          3.9 Health Status (RTEHLTH1-MAMOGRM3)  
          3.10 Utilization, Expenditures and Source of Payment Variables (TOTTCH96-RXOSR96)  
          4.0 Survey Sample Information  
          4.1 Sample Design and Response Rates - Full Year  
          4.2 Sample Weights and Variance Estimation Variables - Full Year  
          4.3 Sample Weights and Variance Estimation Variables - Round 2  
          D. Variable-Source Crosswalk  
           Appendix 1 
        A.  Data Use Agreement 
         Individual identifiers have been removed from the microdata contained in the files on this CD-ROM. 
          Nevertheless, under sections 308 (d) and 903 (c) of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 242m
          and 42 U.S.C. 299 a-1), data collected by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
          and/or the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) may not be used for any purpose other than
          for the purpose for which they were supplied; any effort to determine the identity of any reported
          cases, is prohibited by law.
         Therefore in accordance with the above referenced Federal statute, it is understood that:
         
          - No one is to use the data in this data set in any way except for statistical reporting and
            analysis. If the identity of any person or establishment should be discovered inadvertently, then (a)
              no use will be made of this knowledge, (b) the Director, Office of Management, AHRQ
              will be advised of this incident, (c) the information that would identify any individual or
              establishment will be safeguarded or destroyed, as requested by AHRQ, and (d) no one
              else will be informed of the discovered identity. 
 
          - No one will attempt to link this data set with individually identifiable records from any
            data sets other than the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey or the National Health
            Interview Survey. 
 
         
        By using these data you signify your agreement to comply with the above-stated statutorily based
          requirements, with the knowledge that deliberately making a false statement in any matter within the
          jurisdiction of any department or agency of the Federal Government violates 18 U.S.C. 1001 and is
          punishable by a fine of up to $10,000 or up to 5 years in prison.
         The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality requests that users cite AHRQ and the Medical
          Expenditure Panel Survey as the data source in any publications or research based upon these data.
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        B.  Background
         This documentation describes one in a series of public use files from the Medical Expenditure Panel
          Survey (MEPS).  The survey provides a new and extensive data set on the use of health services and
          health care in the United States.
         MEPS is conducted to provide nationally representative estimates of health care use, expenditures,
          sources of payment, and insurance coverage for the U.S. civilian noninstitutionalized population.
          MEPS also includes a nationally representative survey of nursing homes and their residents.  MEPS
          is cosponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) (formerly the Agency
          for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR)) and the National Center for Health Statistics
          (NCHS).
         MEPS comprises four component surveys: the Household Component (HC), the Medical Provider
          Component (MPC), the Insurance Component (IC), and the Nursing Home Component (NHC).  The
          HC is the core survey, and it forms the basis for the MPC sample and part of the IC sample. The
          separate NHC sample supplements the other MEPS components.  Together these surveys yield
          comprehensive data that provide national estimates of the level and distribution of health care use and
          expenditures, support health services research, and can be used to assess health care policy
          implications.
         MEPS is the third in a series of national probability surveys conducted by AHRQ on the financing
          and use of medical care in the United States. The National Medical Care Expenditure Survey
          (NMCES, also known as NMES-1) was conducted in 1977, the National Medical Expenditure Survey
          (NMES-2) in 1987.  Beginning in 1996, MEPS continues this series with design enhancements and
          efficiencies that provide a more current data resource to capture the changing dynamics of the health
          care delivery and insurance system.
         The design efficiencies incorporated into MEPS are in accordance with the Department of Health and
          Human Services (DHHS) Survey Integration Plan of June 1995, which focused on consolidating
          DHHS surveys, achieving cost efficiencies, reducing respondent burden, and enhancing analytical
          capacities.  To accommodate these goals, new MEPS design features include linkage with the
          National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), from which the sampling frame for the MEPS HC is
          drawn, and continuous longitudinal data collection for core survey components.  The MEPS HC
          augments NHIS by selecting a sample of NHIS respondents, collecting additional data on their health
          care expenditures, and linking these data with additional information collected from the respondents'
          medical providers, employers, and insurance providers.
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        1.0	Household Component
         The MEPS HC, a nationally representative survey of the U.S. civilian noninstitutionalized population,
          collects medical expenditure data at both the person and household levels. The HC collects detailed
          data on demographic characteristics, health conditions, health status, use of medical care services,
          charges and payments, access to care, satisfaction with care, health insurance coverage, income, and
          employment.
         The HC uses an overlapping panel design in which data are collected through a preliminary contact
          followed by a series of five rounds of interviews over a 2½-year period. Using computer-assisted
          personal interviewing (CAPI) technology, data on medical expenditures and use for two calendar
          years are collected from each household.  This series of data collection rounds is launched each
          subsequent year on a new sample of households to provide overlapping panels of survey data and,
          when combined with other ongoing panels, will provide continuous and current estimates of health
          care expenditures.
         The sampling frame for the MEPS HC is drawn from respondents to NHIS, conducted by NCHS. 
          NHIS provides a nationally representative sample of the U.S. civilian noninstitutionalized population,
          with oversampling of Hispanics and blacks.
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        2.0	Medical Provider Component
         The MEPS MPC supplements and validates information on medical care events reported in the MEPS
          HC by contacting medical providers and pharmacies identified by household respondents.  The MPC
          sample includes all hospitals, hospital physicians, home health agencies, and pharmacies reported in
          the HC.  Also included in the MPC are all office-based physicians:
         
          - Providing care for HC respondents receiving Medicaid.
 
          -   Associated with a 75-percent sample of HC households receiving care through an HMO
            (health maintenance organization) or managed care plan.
 
          - Associated with a 25-percent sample of the remaining HC households.
 
         
        Data are collected on medical and financial characteristics of medical and pharmacy events reported
          by HC respondents, including:
         
          - Diagnoses coded according to ICD-9-CM (9th Revision, International Classification of
            Diseases) and DSM-IV (Fourth Edition, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
              Disorders).
 
          -   Physician procedure codes classified by CPT-4 (Common Procedure Terminology,
            Version 4).
 
          -   Inpatient stay codes classified by DRGs (diagnosis-related groups).
 
          -   Prescriptions coded by national drug code (NDC), medication name, strength, and
            quantity dispensed.
 
          -   Charges, payments, and the reasons for any difference between charges and payments.
 
         
        The MPC is conducted through telephone interviews and mailed survey materials.
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        3.0	Insurance Component
         The MEPS IC collects data on health insurance plans obtained through employers, unions, and other
          sources of private health insurance.  Data obtained in the IC include the number and types of private
          insurance plans offered, benefits associated with these plans, premiums, contributions by employers
          and employees, eligibility requirements, and employer characteristics.
         Establishments participating in the MEPS IC are selected through four sampling frames:
         
          - A list of employers or other insurance providers identified by MEPS HC respondents who
            report having private health insurance at the Round 1 interview.
 
          -   A Bureau of the Census list frame of private-sector business establishments.
 
          -   The Census of Governments from Bureau of the Census.
 
          -   An Internal Revenue Service list of the self-employed.
 
           
         
        To provide an integrated picture of health insurance, data collected from the first sampling frame
          (employers and insurance providers) are linked back to data provided by the MEPS HC respondents. 
          Data from the other three sampling frames are collected to provide annual national and State estimates
          of the supply of private health insurance available to American workers and to evaluate policy issues
          pertaining to health insurance.
         The MEPS IC is an annual survey.  Data are collected from the selected organizations through a
          prescreening telephone interview, a mailed questionnaire, and a telephone followup for
          nonrespondents.
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        4.0	Nursing Home Component
         The 1996 MEPS NHC was a survey of nursing homes and persons residing in or admitted to nursing
          homes at any time during calendar year 1996.  The NHC gathered information on the demographic
          characteristics, residence history, health and functional status, use of services, use of prescription
          medicines, and health care expenditures of nursing home residents.  Nursing home administrators and
          designated staff also provided information on facility size, ownership, certification status, services
          provided, revenues and expenses, and other facility characteristics.  Data on the income, assets, family
          relationships, and care-giving services for sampled nursing home residents were obtained from next-of-kin or other knowledgeable persons in the community.
         The 1996 MEPS NHC sample was selected using a two-stage stratified probability design.  In the first
          stage, facilities were selected; in the second stage, facility residents were sampled, selecting both
          persons in residence on January 1, 1996, and those admitted during the period January 1 through
          December 31.
         The sample frame for facilities was derived from the National Health Provider Inventory, which is
          updated periodically by NCHS.  The MEPS NHC data were collected in person in three rounds of
          data collection over a 1½-year period using the CAPI system.  Community data were collected by
          telephone using computer-assisted telephone interviewing (CATI) technology.  At the end of three
          rounds of data collection, the sample consisted of approximately 815 responding facilities, 3,209
          residents in the facility on January 1, and 2,690 eligible residents admitted during 1996.
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        5.0	Survey Management
         MEPS data are collected under the authority of the Public Health Service Act. They are edited and
          published in accordance with the confidentiality provisions of this act and the Privacy Act. NCHS
          provides consultation and technical assistance.
         As soon as data collection and editing are completed, the MEPS survey data are released to the public
          in staged releases of summary reports and microdata files.  Summary reports are released as printed
          documents and electronic files. Microdata files are released on CD-ROM and/or as electronic files.
         Printed documents and CD-ROMs are available through the AHRQ Publications Clearinghouse.
          Write or call:
         
            AHRQ Publications Clearinghouse 
            Attn: (publication number) 
            P.O. Box 8547 
            Silver Spring, MD 20907 
            800/358-9295 
            410/381-3150 (callers outside the United States only) 
            888/586-6340 (toll-free TDD service; hearing impaired only)
           
         
        Be sure to specify the AHRQ number of the document or CD-ROM you are requesting. Selected
          electronic files are available from the Internet on the MEPS web site: http://www.meps.ahrq.gov.
         Additional information on MEPS is available from the MEPS project manager or the MEPS public
          use data manager at the Center for Cost and Financing Studies, Agency for Healthcare Research and
          Quality.
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        C.  Technical and Programming Information
         1.0	General Information
         This documentation describes the 1996 Full Year Consolidated Data File.  Released as an ASCII data
          file and a SAS transport file, this public use file provides information collected on a nationally
          representative sample of the civilian noninstitutionalized population of the United States and can be
          used to make estimates of utilization and expenditures for calendar year 1996. This file consists of
          data obtained in Rounds 1, 2 and 3 of the survey (i.e., covering calendar year 1996) and contains
          variables previously released on MEPS public use files HC-002, -003, -004, -008 and -011.  These
          variables are unchanged and are being provided on one consolidated data file as a convenience for
          users.  This file also contains the following variables not previously released:  edited versions of
          parent ID variables; pregnancy indicator variables; and disability days indicator variables.
         The following documentation offers a brief overview of the types and levels of data provided, the
          content and structure of the files, information on sampling weights and variance estimation,  and a
          codebook (contained in the file H12CB.PDF).
         For more information on MEPS HC survey design see S. Cohen, 1997; J. Cohen, 1997; and S.
          Cohen, 1996. For information on the MEPS MPC design, see S. Cohen, 1998.  A copy of the
          survey instrument used to collect the information on this file is available on the MEPS web site at
          the following address: http://www.meps.ahrq.gov
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        2.0	Data File Description
         This public use data set contains one record for each of 22,601 persons from the Household
          Component of the 1996 Panel of the Medical Panel Expenditure Survey.  This count includes all
          household survey respondents who resided in eligible responding households.  Of these persons, a
          total of 21,571 were assigned a positive person level weight.  For each variable on the file, both
          weighted and unweighted frequencies are provided in the codebook.  In conjunction with the
          weight variable (WTDPER96) provided on this file, data for these persons can be used to make
          estimates for the civilian non-institutionalized U.S. population for 1996.
         Data from this file can be merged with other 1996 MEPS HC data files using the unique person
          identifier, DUPERSID.
         A crosswalk file which facilitates the linkage of this file to any of the 1995 National Health
          Interview Survey Public Use data files is available upon request by sending an e-mail to mepspd@ahrq.gov.
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        2.1	Codebook Structure
         For each variable on the file, both weighted and unweighted frequencies are provided. The
          codebook and data file sequence list variables in the following order:
           Survey administration variables
           Demographic and family relationship variables
           Income and tax filing variables
           Employment variables
           Insurance variables
           Pregnancy indicator variables
           Disability days indicator variables
           Health status and access to care variables
           Utilization, expenditures and source of payment variables
           Weight and variance estimation variables
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        2.2 	Reserved Codes
         The following reserved code values are used:
            VALUE			DEFINITION
           -1 INAPPLICABLE		Question was not asked due to skip pattern.
           -2 DETERMINED IN 	Question was not asked in round because there was	    PREVIOUS ROUND	no change in employment status or no change in current
          main job since previous round.
           -3 NO DATA IN ROUND	Person has no data in round.
           -7 REFUSED			Question was asked and respondent refused to answer
          question.
           -8 DK  			Question was asked and respondent did not know answer.
           -9 NOT ASCERTAINED	Interviewer did not record the data.
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        2.3 	Codebook Format
         This codebook describes an ASCII data set and provides the following information for each
          variable:
         
          
            | IDENTIFIER  | 
             DESCRIPTION  | 
           
          
            |  Name | 
             Variable name (maximum of 8 characters) | 
           
          
            |  Description  | 
             Variable descriptor (maximum 40 characters)  | 
           
          
            |  Format  | 
             Number of bytes  | 
           
          
            |  Type  | 
             Type of data:  numeric (indicated by NUM) or character (indicated
              by CHAR)  | 
           
          
            |  Start  | 
             Beginning column position of variable in record  | 
           
          
            |  End  | 
             Ending column position of variable in record  | 
           
         
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         2.4 	Variable Naming
         In general, variable names reflect the content of the variable, with an 8 character limitation. Edited
          variables end in an X, and are so noted in the variable label.  The last character in round specific
          variables denotes the round of data collection.  Unless otherwise noted, variables that end in 96
          represent status as of December 31, 1996. Variables contained in this delivery were derived either
          from the questionnaire itself or from the CAPI.  The source of each variable is identified in the
          section of the documentation entitled "D.  Variable-Source Crosswalk."  Sources for each variable
          are indicated in one of four ways: (1) variables which are derived from CAPI or assigned in
          sampling are so indicated; (2) variables derived from complex algorithms associated with re-enumeration are labeled "RE Section;" (3) variables which come from one or more specific
          questions in the instrument have those question numbers listed in the "SOURCE" column; (4)
          variables constructed from multiple questions using complex algorithms are labeled
  "Constructed" in the column.
         Additional details on naming conventions for utilization and expenditure variables can be found
          in Appendix 1.
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        3.0 	Data File Contents
         3.1	Survey Administration Variables (DUID-RURSLT3)
         The survey administration variables contain information related to conducting the interview,
          household and family composition, and person-level and RU-level status codes. Data for the
          survey administration variables were derived from the sampling process, the CAPI programs, or
          were computed based on information provided by the respondent in the reenumeration section of
          the questionnaire.  Most Survey Administration variables on this file are asked during every round
          of the MEPS interview.  They describe data for Rounds 1, 2, and status as of December 31, 1996.
         The December 31, 1996 variables were developed in two ways. Those used in the construction of eligibility, inscope, and the end reference date, were based on an exact date.  The remaining
          variables were constructed using data from specific rounds, if available.  If data were missing
          from the target round, but were available in another round, data from that other round were used
          in the variable construction.  If no valid data were available during any round of data collection,
          an appropriate reserved code was assigned.
         Dwelling Units, Reporting Units, and Families
         The definitions of Dwelling Units (DUs) and Group Quarters in the MEPS Household Survey are
          generally consistent with the definitions employed for the National Health Interview Survey. The
          dwelling unit ID (DUID) is a five-digit random ID number assigned after the case was sampled
          for MEPS. The person number (PID) uniquely identifies all persons within the dwelling unit. The
          variable DUPERSID is the combination of the variables DUID and PID.
         A Reporting Unit (RU) is a person or group of persons in the sampled dwelling unit who are
          related by blood, marriage, adoption, foster care or other family association. Each RU was
          interviewed as a single entity for MEPS. Thus, the RU serves chiefly as a family-based "survey
          operations" unit rather than an analytic unit. Members of each RU within the DU are identified in
          the first two rounds by the round-specific variables RULETTR1 and RULETTR2. End-of-year
          status (as of December 31, 1996) is indicated by the RULETR96 variable.  Regardless of the legal
          status of their association, two persons living together as a "family" unit were treated as a single
          reporting unit if they chose to be so identified. Examples of different types of reporting units are:
           1.	A married daughter and her husband living with her parents in the same dwelling unit
          constitute a single reporting unit.
           2.	A husband and wife and their unmarried daughter, age 18, who is living away from home
          while at college constitute two reporting units.
           3.	Three unrelated persons living in the same dwelling unit would each constitute a distinct
          reporting unit, three reporting units in all.
         Unmarried college students less than 24 years of age who usually live in the sampled household,
          but were living away from home and going to school at the time of the Round 1 MEPS interview,
          were treated as a reporting unit separate from that of their parents for the purpose of data
          collection. The round-specific variables RUSIZE1 and RUSIZE2 and the end-of-year status
          variable RUSIZE96 indicates the number of persons in each RU, treating each student as a single
          RU separate from their parents. Thus, students are not included in the RUSIZE count of their
          parents' RU.  However, for many analytic objectives, the student reporting units would be
          combined with their parents' reporting unit, treating the combined entity as a single family. 
          Family identifier and size variables are described below and include students with their parents'
          reporting unit.
         The round-specific variables FAMID1, FAMID2 and the end-of-year status variable FAMID96
          identify a family (i.e., persons related to one another by blood, marriage, adoption, foster care, or
          self-identified as a single unit) for each round and as of December 31, 1996. The FAMID
          variables differ from RU only in that student reporting units are combined with their parent
          reporting unit.
         Two other family identifiers, FAMIDYR and CPSFAMID
          are provided on this file. The annualized family ID letter, FAMIDYR,
          identifies eligible members of the eligible annualized
          families within a DU.  The CPSFAMID identifies eligible members of
          eligible CPS-like families at 12/31/1996. CPSFAMID represents a redefinition
          of MEPS families into families defined by
          the Current Population Survey (CPS).  Some of the distinctions between
          CPS and MEPS defined families are that MEPS families include and CPS
          families do not include: non-married partners,
          foster children, and in-laws.  These persons are considered as members
          of separate families for CPS-like families. The reason CPS-like families
          are defined is so that a poverty status
          classification variable consistent with established definitions of
          poverty can be assigned to the CPS-like families and used for weight
          poststratification purposes. In order to identify a person's
          family affiliation users must create a unique set of FAMID variables
          by concatenating the DU identifier and the FAMID variable. Instructions
          to create family estimates are described in section
          4.2.2.
         The round-specific variables FAMSIZE1, FAMSIZE2 and the end-of-year status variable
          FAMSZE96 indicate the number of persons associated with a single family unit after students are
          linked to their associated parent RUs for analytical purposes. Family-level analyses should use the
          FAMSIZE variables.
         Note: the variables RUSIZE1, RUSIZE2, RUSIZE96, FAMSIZE1, FAMSIZE2, and FAMSZE96
          exclude persons who are ineligible for data collection (i.e., those where ELIGRND1 ne 1 or
          ELIGRND2 ne 1 or ELIGRND96 ne 1); analysts should exclude ineligible persons in a given
          round from all family-level analyses for that round.
         The round-specific variables RURSLT1, RURSLT2, and RURSLT3 indicate the RU response
          status for each round.  Users should note that the values for RURSLT1 differ from those for
          RURSLT2 and RURSLT3.  The values for RURSLT1 include the following:
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            |  60 | 
             Complete with RU member | 
           
          
            |  61 | 
             Complete with proxy--all RU members deceased  | 
           
          
            |  62 | 
             Complete with proxy--all RU members institutionalized or deceased  | 
           
          
            |  63 | 
             Complete with proxy, other | 
           
         
         
        The values for RURSLT2 and RURSLT3 include the following:
         
          
            |  60 | 
             Complete with RU member | 
           
          
            |  61 | 
             Complete with proxy--all RU members deceased  | 
           
          
            |  62 | 
             Complete with proxy--all RU members institutionalized or deceased  | 
           
          
            |  63 | 
             Complete with proxy, other | 
           
          
            |  71 | 
             Reenumeration complete, no eligible RU members, ineligible | 
           
          
            |  72  | 
             RU institutionalized in prior round, still institutionalized | 
           
          
            |  95 | 
             Eligible RU member(s) institutionalized, no proxy | 
           
         
         
        There are several other variables that characterize the reporting unit. The round-specific variables
          RUCLASS1, RUCLASS2 and the end-of-year status variable RUCLAS96 indicate the RU
          classification.  RUs are classified for fielding purposes as 1 "Standard," 2 "New RU," or 3
  "Student RU."  Standard RUs are the original RUs from NHIS.  All primary RUs are classified as
          standard RUs.  A new RU is one which has been created when members of the household leave
          the primary RU and are followed according to the rules of the survey.  A student RU is one in
          which an unmarried college student under 24 years of age is considered a usual member of the
          household but was living away from home while going to school and was treated as a Reporting
          Unit (RU) separate from that of their parents for the purpose of data collection.  RUCLAS96 was
          set based on the RUCLASS values from Rounds 1, 2, and 3.  If the person was present in the
          responding RU in Round 3, then RUCLAS96 was set to RUCLASS3.  If the person was not
          present in a responding RU in Round 3, but was present in Round 2, then RUCLAS96 was set to
          RUCLASS2. If the person was not present in either Rounds 2 or 3, but was present in Round 1,
          then RUCLAS96 was set to RUCLASS1.  If the person was not linked to a responding RU during
          any round then RUCLAS96 was set to -9.
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        Reference Period Dates
         The reference period is the period of time for which data were collected in each round for each
          person.  The reference period dates were determined during the interview for each person by the
          CAPI program. The round-specific beginning reference period dates are included for each person. 
          These variables include BEGREFM1, BEGREFD1, BEGREFY1, BEGREFM2, BEGREFD2,
          BEGREFY2, BEGREFM3, BEGREFD3, and BEGREFY3. The reference period for Round 1 for
          most persons identified at NHIS began on January 1, 1996 and ended on the date of the Round 1
          interview. For RU members who joined later in Round 1, the beginning Round 1 reference date
          was the date the person entered the RU.  For subsequent rounds, the reference period for most
          persons began on the date of the previous round's interview and ended on the date of the current
          round's interview.  Persons who joined after the previous round's interview had their beginning
          reference date for the round set as the day they joined the RU.
         The round-specific ending reference period dates for Rounds 1 and 2 as well as the end-of year
          reference period end date variables are also included for each person.  These variables include
          ENDREFM1, ENDREFD1, ENDREFY1, ENDREFM2, ENDREFD2, ENDREFY2, ENDRFM96,
          ENDRFD96, and ENDRFY96.  For most persons in the sample, the date of the interview is the
          reference period end date.  Note that the end date of the reference period is prior to the date of the
          interview if the person was deceased during the round, left the RU, or was institutionalized prior
          to that round's interview, or left the RU to join the military.
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        Reference Person Identifiers
         The round specific variables REFPERS1 and REFPERS2 and the end-of-year status variable
          REFPRS96 identify the reference person for Rounds 1 and 2 and as of December 31, 1996.  In
          general, the reference person is defined as the household member 16 years of age or older who
          owns or rents the home.  If more than one person meets this description, the household respondent
          identifies one from among them.  If the respondent was unable to identify a person fitting this
          definition, the questionnaire asked for the head of household and this person was then considered
          the reference person for that RU.  This information was collected in the Reenumeration section of
          the CAPI questionnaire.
         Respondent Identifiers
         The respondent is the person who answered the interview questions for the reporting unit (RU). 
          The round specific variables RESP1 and RESP2 and the end-of-year status variable RESP96
          identify the respondent for Rounds 1 and 2 and as of December 31, 1996. Only one respondent is
          identified for each RU. In instances where the interview was completed in more than one session,
          only the first respondent is indicated.
         There are two types of respondents.  The respondent can be either an RU member or a non-RU
          member proxy. The round specific variables PROXY1 and PROXY2 and the end-of-year status
          variable PROXY96 identify the type of respondent for Rounds 1 and 2 and as of December 31,
          1996.
         Person Status
         A number of variables describe the various components reflecting each person's status for each
          round of data collection.  These variables provide information about a person's inscope status,
          keyness status, eligibility status, and disposition status.  These variables include: INSCOPE,
          INSCOPE1, INSCOPE2, INSCOP96, KEYNESS, ELIGIBLE, ELIGRND1, ELIGRND2,
          ELGRND96, PSTATUS1, PSTATUS2, and PSTATUS3.  These variables are set based on
          sampling information and responses provided in the reenumeration section of the CAPI
          questionnaire.
         Through the reenumeration section of the CAPI questionnaire, each member of a reporting unit
          was classified as "key" or "non-key", "inscope" or "out-of-scope", and "eligible" or
  "ineligible" for MEPS data collection. To be included in the set of persons used in the derivation
          of MEPS person level estimates, a person had to be a member of the civilian non-institutionalized
          population for at least one day during 1996. Because a person's eligibility for the survey might
          have changed since the NHIS interview, a sampling reenumeration of household membership was
          conducted at the start of each round's interview. Only persons who were "inscope" sometime
          during the year, "key", and responded for the full period in which they were inscope were
         assigned positive person level weights and thus are to be used in the derivation of person level
          national estimates from the MEPS.
         Note: if analysts want to subset to infants born during 1996, then newborns should be identified
          using AGE96X =0 rather than PSTATUS=51.
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        Inscope
         A person was considered as inscope during a round if he or she was a member of the U.S. civilian,
          non-institutionalized population at some time during that round. The round specific variables
          INSCOPE1 and INSCOPE2 indicate a person's inscope status for rounds 1 and 2.  INSCOP96
          indicates a person's inscope status for the portion of round 3 that covers 1996. The values of
          these three variables taken in conjunction allow one to determine inscope status over time (for
          example, becoming inscope in the middle of a round, as would be the case for newborns).  The
          INSCOPE variable indicates whether a person was ever inscope during the calendar year 1996.
          INSCOPE1, INSCOPE2, and INSCOP96 will contain the following values (for INSCOP96,
  "reference period" in the description below is the portion of Round 3 in 1996):
         
         
          
            |  0 | 
             Incorrectly listed, or on NHIS roster but out-of-scope prior to January 1, 1996 | 
           
          
            |  1 | 
             Person is inscope for the whole reference period | 
           
          
            |  2 | 
             Person is inscope at the start of the RU reference period, but not at the end of
              the RU reference period. | 
           
          
            |  3 | 
             Person is not inscope at the start of RU reference period, but is inscope at the
              end of the RU reference period.  (E.g., the person is inscope from the date the
              person joined the RU or the person was in the military in the previous round,
              but is no longer in the military in the current round.) | 
           
          
            |  4 | 
             Person is inscope during the reference period, but neither at the reference start
              date nor on the reference end date.  (E.g., Person leaves an institution, goes
              into community, and then dies.)  | 
           
          
            |  5 | 
             Person is out-of-scope for all of the reference period during which they are in
              an RU member (i.e. The person is in the military.) | 
           
          
            |  6 | 
             Person is out-of-scope for the entire reference period and is not a member of
              the RU during this time period and was inscope and an RU member in an
              earlier round.  | 
           
          
            |  7 | 
             Person is not in an RU, joined in a later round (or joined RU after December
              31, 1996 for INSCOP96) | 
           
          
            |  8 | 
             RU Non-response and Key persons who left an RU with no tracing info and
              so a new RU was not formed | 
           
          
            |  9 | 
             Person is non-key or full time in the military, not a member of an RU during
              this time period, and was an RU member in an earlier round | 
           
         
         
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        Keyness
         The term "keyness" is related to an individual's chance of being included in MEPS. A person is
          key if that person is linked for sampling purposes to the set of 1995 NHIS sampled households
          designated for inclusion in MEPS. Specifically, a key person either was a member of an NHIS
          household at the time of the NHIS interview, or became a member of such a household after being
          out-of-scope at the time of the 1995 NHIS (examples of the latter situation include newborns and
          persons returning from military service, an institution, or living outside the United States).
         A non-key person is one whose chance of selection for the NHIS (and MEPS) was associated with
          a household eligible but not sampled for the NHIS, and who later became a member of a MEPS
          reporting unit. MEPS data, (e.g., utilization and income) were collected for the period of time a
          non-key person was part of the sampled unit to provide information for family level analyses.
          However, non-key persons who leave a sample household unaccompanied by a key, inscope
          member were not followed for subsequent interviews. Non-key individuals do not receive sample
          person-level weights and thus do not contribute to person level national estimates.
         The variable KEYNESS indicates a person's keyness status.  This variable is not round-specific. 
          Instead, it is set at the time the person enters MEPS, and the person's keyness status never
          changes. Once a person is determined to be key, that person will always be key.
         It should be pointed out that a person may be key even though not part of the civilian, non-institutionalized portion of the U.S. population. For example, a person in the military may have
          been living with his or her civilian spouse and children in a household sampled for the 1995
          NHIS. The person in the military would be considered a key person for MEPS, however, such a
          person would not be eligible to receive a person-level sample weight if he or she was never
          inscope during 1996.
             Return To Table Of 
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        Eligibility
         The eligibility of a person for MEPS pertains to whether or not data were to be collected for that
          person. All key, inscope persons of a sampled RU were eligible for data collection. The only non-key persons eligible for data collection were those who happened to be living in an RU with at
          least one key, inscope person. Their eligibility continued only for the time that they were living
          with at least one such person. The only out-of-scope persons eligible for data collection were
          those who were living with key inscope persons, again only for the time they were living with
          such a person. Only military persons can meet this description (for example, a person on full time
          active duty military, living with a spouse who is key).
         A person may be classified as eligible for an entire round or for some part of a round.  For persons
          who are eligible for only part of a round (for example, persons may have been institutionalized
          during a round) data were collected for that person only for the period of time for which that
          person was classified as eligible.  The round specific variables ELIGRND1 and ELIGRND2 and
          the end-of-year status variable ELGRND96 indicate a persons eligibility status for Rounds 1 and 2
          and as of December 31, 1996.  The ELIGIBLE variable indicates if a person was ever eligible
          during the calendar year 1996.
         Person Disposition Status
         The round-specific variables PSTATUS1, PSTATUS2, and PSTATUS3 indicate a person's
          response and eligibility status for each round of interviewing. The PSTATUS variables indicate
          the reasons for either continuing data collection for a person or terminating data collection for
          each person in the MEPS.  Using this variable, one could identify persons who moved during the
          reference period, died, were born, institutionalized or who were in the military. Analysts should
          note that PSTATUS3 provides a summary for all of Round 3, including transitions that occurred
          after 1996.  However, PSTATUS3 is still a useful guide to following transitions that occur over
          time in the sample for 1996.
             Return To Table Of 
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        The following codes specify the value labels for the PSTATUS variables.
         
         
          
            |  -1 | 
             The person was not fielded during the round or the RU was non-response | 
           
          
            |  0 | 
             Incorrectly listed in RU at NHIS -applies to MEPS Round 1 only | 
           
          
            |  11 | 
             Person in original RU , not full time active military duty | 
           
          
            |  12 | 
             Person in original RU, full time active military duty, out-of-scope for whole
              reference period. | 
           
          
            |  13 | 
             Full time student living away from home, but associated with sampled RU | 
           
          
            |  14 | 
             The person is full time active military duty during round and is inscope for part of
              the reference period and is in the RU at the end of the reference period | 
           
          
            |  21 | 
             The person remains in a health care institution for the whole round - rounds 2 and
              3 only | 
           
          
            |  22 | 
             The person leaves a health care institution and rejoins the community - rounds 2
              and 3 only | 
           
          
            |  23 | 
             The person leaves a health care institution, goes into community and then dies -
              rounds 2 and 3 only  | 
           
          
            |  24 | 
             The person dies in a health care institution during the round (former RU member)
              - rounds 2 and 3 only | 
           
          
            |  31 | 
             Person from original RU, dies during reference period | 
           
          
            |  32 | 
             Went to health care institution during reference period | 
           
          
            |  33 | 
             Went to non-healthcare institution during reference period | 
           
          
            |  34 | 
             Moved from original RU, outside U.S. (not as student) | 
           
          
            |  35 | 
             Moved from original RU, to a military facility while on full time active military
              duty | 
           
          
            |  36 | 
             Went to institution (type unknown) during reference period | 
           
          
            |  41 | 
             Moved from the original RU, to new RU within U.S. (new RUs include RUs
              originally classified as "Student RU" but which converted to "New RU") | 
           
          
            |  42 | 
             The person joins RU and is not full time military during round | 
           
          
            |  3 | 
             The person's disposition as to why the person is not in the RU is unknown or the
              person moves and it is unknown whether the person moved inside or outside the
              U.S. | 
           
          
            |  4 | 
             The person leaves an RU and joins an existing RU and is not both in the military
              and coded as inscope during the round | 
           
          
            |  51 | 
             Newborn in reference period | 
           
          
            |  61 | 
             Died prior to reference period (not eligible)-Round 1 only | 
           
          
            |  62 | 
             Institutionalized prior to reference period (not eligible)-Round 1 only | 
           
          
            |  63 | 
             Moved outside U.S., prior to reference period (not eligible)-Round 1 only | 
           
          
            |  64 | 
             Full time military, living on a military facility, moved prior to reference period
              (not eligible)-Round 1 only | 
           
          
            |  71 | 
             Student under 24 living away at school in grades 1-12 (non-KEY) | 
           
          
            |  72 | 
             Person is dropped from the RU roster as ineligible:  the person is a non-key
              student living away or the person is not related to reference person or the RU is
              the person's residence only during the school year | 
           
          
            |  73 | 
             Not Key and not full-time military, moved w/o someone key and inscope (not
              eligible) | 
           
          
            |  74 | 
             Moved as full-time military but not to a military facility and w/o someone key
              and inscope (not eligible this round) | 
           
          
            |  81 | 
             Person moved from original RU, full time student living away from home, did
              not respond | 
           
         
         
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        In addition, the variable INRU1231 indicates if a person was present in the RU on December 31,
          1996.  Persons living in the RU as well as any person coded as "living away in grades 1-12" will
          have a value of "1" indicating "Yes, the person was present on December 31, 1996."         
         Navigating the MEPS Data with Information on Person Disposition Status
         Since the variables PSTATUS1, PSTATUS2, and PSTATUS3 indicate the reasons for either
          continuing or terminating data collection for each person in MEPS, these variables can be used to
          explain the beginning and ending dates for each individual's reference period of data collection, as
          well as which sections in the instrument each individual received.  By using the information
          included in the table below, analysts will be able to determine for each individual which sections
          of the MEPS questionnaire collected data elements for that person.
         Some individuals have a reference period that spans an entire round, while other individuals may
          have data collected only for a portion of the round.  When an individual's reference period does
          not coincide with the RU reference period, the individual's start date may be a later date, or their
          end date may be an earlier date, or both. In addition, some individuals have reference period
          information coded as inapplicable (e.g., for individuals who were not actually in the household). 
          The information in this table indicates the beginning and ending dates of reference periods for
          persons with various values of PSTATUS1, PSTATUS2, and PSTATUS3.  The actual dates for
          each individual can be found in the following variables included on this file: BEGREFM1,
          BEGREFM2, BEGREFM3, BEGREFD1, BEGREFD2, BEGREFD3, BEGREFY1, BEGREFY2,
          BEGREFY3, ENDREFM1, ENDREFM2, ENDREFD1, ENDREFD2, ENDREFY1, ENDREFY2,
          ENDRFM96, ENDRFD96, and ENDRFY96.
         The table below also describes the section or sections of the questionnaire which were NOT asked
          for each value of PSTATUS1, PSTATUS2, and PSTATUS3. For example, the condition
          enumeration (CE) and alternative/preventive care (AP) sections have questions which are not
          asked for deceased persons. The closing section (CL) also contains some questions or question
          rosters (see CL06A, CL35 through CL37, CL48 through CL50, CL54, CL58, and CL64) that
          exclude certain persons depending on whether the person died, became institutionalized, or
          otherwise left the reporting unit; however, no one is considered to have skipped the entire section. 
          Some questions or sections (e.g., health status (HE), employment (RJ, EM, EW)) are skipped if
          individuals are not within a certain age range.  Since the PSTATUS variables do not address skip
          patterns based on age, analysts will need to use the appropriate age variables.
             Return To Table Of 
Contents 
        Please note that the end reference date shown below for PSTATUS3 reflects the Round 3
          reference period rather than the portion of Round 3 which occurred during 1996.
         
         
          
            |  PSTATUS
              Value | 
              PSTATUS 
              Description    | 
              Sections in the
              instrument which
              persons with this
              PSTATUS value do
              NOT receive  | 
              Begin
              Reference Date  | 
              End 
              Reference Date    | 
           
          
            |  -1 | 
             The person was not
              fielded during the round
              or the RU was non-response | 
             ALL sections | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  0 | 
             Incorrectly listed in RU
              at NHIS B Round 1 only | 
             ALL sections after RE | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  11 | 
             Person in original
              household, not FT active
              military duty (Person is
              in the same RU as the
              previous round) | 
             -- | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date  | 
             Interview date | 
           
          
            |  12 | 
             Person in original
              household, FT active
              military duty, out-of-scope for whole
              reference period. | 
             -- | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996  PSTATUS2 and
                PSTATUS3: 
                Prior round
                interview date | 
             Interview date | 
           
          
            |  13 | 
             FT student living away
              from home, but
              associated with sampled
              household | 
             -- | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date  | 
             Interview date | 
           
          
            |  14 | 
             The person is FT active
              military duty during
              round and is in-scope
              for part of the reference
              period and is in the RU
              at the end of the
              reference period | 
             -- | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date  | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              Interview date PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: If the
              person is living w/
              someone key and in-scope, then the
              interview date.  If not
              living w/ someone who
              is key and in-scope,
              then the date the
              person joined the
              military  | 
           
          
            |  21 | 
             The person remains in a
              health care institution
              for the whole round B
              rounds 2 and 3 only | 
             All sections after RE | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  22 | 
             The person leaves a
              health care institution
              and rejoins the
              community B rounds 2
              and 3 only | 
             -- | 
             Date rejoined
              the community | 
             Interview date | 
           
          
            |  23 | 
             The person leaves a
              health care institution,
              goes into community
              and then dies B rounds 2
              and 3 only  | 
             Part of CE B
              Condition
              enumeration:  Skip
              CE1 to-CE5 HE B Health status 
              AC B Access to care 
              Part of AP B
              Alternative/Preventive
              care:  Skip AP12 to
              AP22  | 
             Date rejoined
              the community | 
             Date of Death | 
           
          
            |  24 | 
             The person dies in a
              health care institution
              during the round (former
              household member) B
              rounds 2 and 3 only | 
             All sections after RE | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  31 | 
             Person from original
              household, dies during
              reference period | 
             Part of CE B
              Condition
              enumeration:  Skip
              CE1 to-CE5 HE B Health status 
              AC B Access to care 
              Part of AP B
              Alternative/Preventive
              care:  Skip AP12 to
              AP22  | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date  | 
             Date of Death | 
           
          
            |  32 | 
             Went to healthcare
              institution during
              reference period | 
             Access to care (AC) | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date  | 
             Date institutionalized | 
           
          
            |  33 | 
             Went to non-healthcare
              institution during
              reference period | 
             Access to care (AC) | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date  | 
             Date institutionalized | 
           
          
            |  34 | 
             Moved from original
              household, outside US | 
             -- | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date  | 
             Date left the RU | 
           
          
            |  35 | 
             Moved from original
              household, to a military
              facility while on FT
              active military duty | 
             -- | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date  | 
             Date left the RU | 
           
          
            |  36 | 
             Went to institution (type
              unknown) during
              reference period | 
             Access to care (AC) | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date  | 
             Date institutionalized | 
           
          
            |  41 | 
             Moved from the original
              household, to new
              household within US
              (new households include
              RUs originally classified
              as a student RU but
              which converted to a
              new RU. These are
              individuals in an RU
              that has split from an
              RU since the previous
              round | 
             -- | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date  | 
             Interview date | 
           
          
            |  42 | 
             The person joins
              household and is not full
              time military during
              round | 
             -- | 
             The later date of
              January 1, 1996
              and the date the
              person joined
              the RU | 
             Interview date | 
           
          
            |  43 | 
             The person's
              disposition as to why the
              person is not in the RU
              is unknown or the
              person moves and it is
              unknown whether the
              person moved inside or
              outside the U.S. | 
             All sections after RE | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  44 | 
             The person leaves an
              RU and joins an existing
              RU and is not both in
              the military and coded as
              inscope during the round | 
             -- | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date of
              the RU the
              person has
              joined.  This
              may not be the
              interview date of
              the RU that the
              person came
              from  | 
             Interview date | 
           
          
            |  51 | 
             Newborn in reference
              period | 
             Questions where age
              must be > 1 (see Health status
              (HE), 
              Disability days (DD) 
              Employment (RJ/EM/EW) will be
              skipped  | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996
              if born prior to
              1996.  The date
              of birth if born
              in 1996. PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              The later of the
              Prior round
              interview date
              and date of birth  | 
             Interview date | 
           
          
            |  61 | 
             Died prior to reference
              period (not eligible)--Round 1 only | 
             All sections after RE | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  62 | 
             Institutionalized prior to
              reference period (not
              eligible)--Round 1 only | 
             All sections after RE | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  63 | 
             Moved outside U.S.,
              prior to reference period
              (not eligible)--Round 1
              only | 
             All sections after RE | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  64 | 
             FT military, moved prior
              to reference period (not
              eligible)--Round 1 only | 
             All sections after RE | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  71 | 
             Student under 24 living
              away at school in grades
              1 thru 12 (non-KEY) | 
             -- | 
             PSTATUS1: 
              January 1, 1996 PSTATUS2 and
              PSTATUS3: 
              Prior round
              interview date  | 
             Interview date | 
           
          
            |  72 | 
             Person is dropped from
              the RU roster as
              ineligible:  the person is
              a non-key student living
              away or the person is
              not related to reference
              person or the RU is the
              person's residence only
              during the school year | 
             All sections after RE | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  73 | 
             Not Key and not full-time military, moved
              w/o someone key and in-scope (not eligible) | 
             All sections after RE | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  74 | 
             Moved as full-time
              military but not to a
              military facility and w/o
              someone key and in-scope (not eligible) | 
             All sections after RE | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
          
            |  81 | 
             Person moved from
              original household, FT
              student living away from
              home, did not respond | 
             No data was collected | 
             Inapplicable | 
             Inapplicable | 
           
         
         
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Contents 
        Geographic Variables         
        The round-specific variables REGION1, REGION2, REGION3, and the end-of-year status
          variable REGION96 indicate the Census region for the RU.  REGION96 indicates the region for
          the 1996 portion of Round 3.  For most analyses, REGION96 should be used.  The round-specific
          variable MSA3 and the end-of-year status variable MSA96 indicate whether or not the RU is
          found in a metropolitan statistical area.  MSA3 indicates the MSA status at the time of the Round
          3 interview.  MSA96 indicates the MSA status for the 1996 portion of Round 3.  For most
          analyses, analysts should use MSA96 rather than MSA3.
             Return To Table Of 
Contents 
        3.2	Demographic and Family Relationship Variables (AGE1X-DADPID2X)
         These variables provide information about the demographic characteristics of each person. As
          noted below, some variables have edited and imputed values.  Most demographic variables on this
          file are asked during every round of the MEPS interview.  These variables describe data for
          Rounds 1 and 2, status as of December 31, 1996, as well as a number of characteristics which are
          not round specific.
         The December 31, 1996 variables were developed in two ways.  For age, this variable represents
          exact age as of 12/31/96, calculated from date of birth.  For the remaining December 31st variables
          (marital status, education, and student status) the following algorithm was used: data were taken
          from Round 2 if non-missing; else data were taken from the Round 3 counterpart; else from the
          Round 1 counterpart.  If no valid data were available during any of these Rounds of data
          collection, the same algorithm was followed to assign a missing value other than "-1
          Inapplicable."
         For relationship to reference person at 12/31/96 (RFREL96X), an alternative algorithm was
          followed.  To be consistent with the way the relationship data were used for post-stratification of
          the weights, relationship to reference person at 12/31/96 takes data first from Round 3, if non-missing; else from the Round 2 counterpart; else from the Round 1 counterpart.
         Sex
         Data on the sex of each RU member (SEX), as determined during the NHIS interview, was
          verified and, if necessary, corrected during each MEPS interview. The data for new RU members
          (persons who were not members of the RU at the time of the NHIS interview) was also obtained
          during each MEPS Round. When sex of the RU member was not available from the NHIS
          interview and was not ascertained during one of the subsequent MEPS interviews, it was assigned
          in the following way. The person's first name was used to assign sex, if obvious (25 cases were
          resolved in this way). If the person's first name provided no indication of gender, then family
          relationships were reviewed (0 cases).  If neither of these approaches made it possible to
          determine the individual's sex, sex was randomly assigned (3 cases).
         Age
         Date of birth and age for each RU member were asked or verified during each MEPS interview
          (DOBMM, DOBYY, AGE1X, AGE2X).  If date of birth was available, age was calculated based
          on the difference between date of birth and date of interview (or the date of death, if the person
          died prior to the interview date).  Inconsistencies between the calculated age and the age reported
          during the CAPI interview were reviewed and resolved.  For purposes of confidentiality, the
          variables AGE1X, AGE2X, and AGE96X were top coded at 90 years.
         When date of birth was not provided but age was (from either the MEPS or the 1995 NHIS data),
          the month and year of birth were assigned randomly from among the possible valid options.  For
          any cases still not accounted for, age was imputed using (1) the mean age difference between
          MEPS participants with certain family relationships (where available) or (2) the mean age value
          for MEPS participants.  For example, a mother's age is imputed as her child's age plus the mean
          age difference between MEPS mothers and their children, or a wife's age is imputed as the
          husband's age plus the mean age difference between MEPS wives and husbands.  Age was
          imputed in this way for eight persons on this file.
             Return To Table Of 
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        Race, Race/Ethnicity, Hispanic Ethnicity, and Hispanic Ethnicity Group
         Race (RACEX) and Hispanic ethnicity (HISPANX) were asked for each RU member during the
          Round 1 MEPS interview.  If this information was not obtained in Round 1, the questions were
          asked in subsequent Rounds.  When race and/or ethnicity was not reported in the Round 1
          interview, values for these variables were obtained based on the following priority order. When
          available, they were obtained from the originally collected NHIS data.  If not ascertained, the race,
          and/or ethnicity were assigned based on relationship to other members of the DU using a priority
          ordering that gave precedence to blood relatives in the immediate family. This approach was used
          in the resolution of a residual group of 18 cases, 11 of which were missing both race and ethnicity
          and 7 of which were missing only ethnicity.  The variable RACETHNX indicating both race and
          ethnicity (e.g., with categories such as "Hispanic" and "black but not Hispanic") reflects the
          imputations done for RACEX and HISPANX. The specific Hispanic ethnicity group is given in
          the unedited variable HISPCAT.
         Student Status and Educational Attainment
         The variables FTSTUD1X, FTSTUD2X and FTSTU96X indicate whether the person was a full-time student at the interview date (or 12/31/96 for FTSTU96X).  These variables have valid
          values for all persons between the ages of 17 - 23 inclusive. When this question was asked during
          the Round 1 interview, it was based on age as of the NHIS interview date.  For the 219 persons
          who were 17 years old at the Round 1 interview, but were 16 years old at the time of the NHIS,
          FTSTUD1X was set to -9.
         Completed years of education are indicated in the variables EDUCYR1, EDUCYR2 and
          EDUCYR96. Information was obtained from questions RE 103-105.  Children who are 5 years of
          age or older and who never attended school were coded as 0; children under the age of 5 years
          were coded as -1 "Inapplicable" regardless of whether or not they attended school.
         The variables indicating highest degree (HIGHDEG1, HIGHDEG2 and HIDEG96) were obtained
          from two questions: high school diploma (RE 104) and highest degree (RE 105). Persons under
          16 years of age were coded as 8 "inapplicable".  In cases where the response to the highest degree
          question was "no degree" and highest grade was 13 through 17, the variable was coded as 3 "high
          school diploma".  If highest grade completed for those with a "no degree" response was "refused"
          or "don't know", the variable was coded as 1 "no degree".
         The user should note that the EDUCYR and HIGHDEG variables are unedited variables and
          minimal data cleaning was performed on these variables.  Therefore, discrepancies across rounds
          of data remain for these two sets of variables.  Decisions as to how to handle these discrepancies
          are left to the analyst.
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        Marital Status and Spouse ID
         Current marital status was collected and/or updated during every Round of the MEPS interview. 
          This information was obtained in RE13 and RE97 and is reported as MARRY1X, MARRY2X
          and MARRY96X.  Persons under the age of 16 were coded as 6 "under 16 - inapplicable."  If
          marital status in Round 2 was different than reported marital status in Round 1, the Round 2
          response was edited to reflect a change during the Round (e.g., married in Round, divorced in
          Round, separated in Round, or widowed in Round).  In instances where there were discrepancies
          between the marital status of two individuals within a family, other person-level variables were
          reviewed to determine the edited marital status for each individual.  For example, when one
          spouse was reported as married and the other spouse reported as widowed, the data were reviewed
          to determine if one partner should be coded as 8 "widowed in Round ."
         Four edits were performed to ensure minimal consistency across rounds.  First, a person could not
          be coded as "Never Married" after previously being coded as any other marital status (e.g.
  "Widowed").  Second, a person could not be coded as "Under 16 - Inapplicable" after being
          previously coded as any other marital status.  Third, a person could not be coded as "Married in
          Round" after being coded as "Married" in the Round immediately preceding. Fourth, a person
          could not be coded as an "in Round" code (e.g., "widowed in Round") in two subsequent Rounds. 
          Because no other edits were performed, and marital status can change across Rounds, unlikely
          sequences for marital status across the Round-specific variables do exist.
         The person identifier for each individual's spouse is reported in SPOUSID1, SPOUSID2 and
          SPOUID96. These are the PIDs (within each family) of the person identified as the spouse during
          Round 1, Round 2 and as of December 31, 1996, respectively. If no spouse was identified in the
          household, the variable was coded as 995 "no spouse in household."  Those with unknown marital
          status are coded as 996. Persons under the age of 16 are coded as 997 "Less than 16 years old."
         The SPOUSIN1, SPOUSIN2 and SPOUIN96 variables indicate whether a person's spouse was
          present in the RU during Round 1, Round 2 and as of December 31, 1996 respectively. If the
          person had no spouse in the household, the value was coded as 2. For persons under the age of 16
          the value was coded as 3.
         The SPOUSID and SPOUSIN variables were obtained from RE76 and RE77, where the
          respondent was asked to identify how each pair of persons in the household were related. Analysts
          should note that this information was collected in a set of questions separate from the questions
          that asked about marital status. While editing was performed to ensure that SPOUSID and
          SPOUSIN are consistent within each Round, there was no consistency check between these
          variables and marital status in a given Round.  Apparent discrepancies between marital status and
          spouse information may be due to any of the following causes:
           1. 	Ambiguity as to when during a Round a change in marital status occurred.  This is a
          result of relationship information being asked for all persons living in the household at
          any time during the Round, while marital status is asked as of the interview date (e.g.,
          If one spouse died during the reference period, the surviving spouse's marital status
          would be "widowed in Round," but SPOUSIN and SPOUSID for the same round
          would indicate that a spouse was present).
           2. 	Valid discrepancies in the case of persons who are married but not living with their
          spouse, or separating but still living together.
           3. 	Discrepancies which cannot be explained for either of the previous reasons.
         Military Service and Service Era
         Information on active duty military status was collected during each Round of the MEPS
          interview.  Persons currently on full-time active duty status are identified in the variables
          ACTDUTY1 and ACTDUTY2.  Those under 16 years of age were coded as 3 "under 16-inapplicable" and those over the age of 59 were coded as 4 "over 59-inapplicable."
         The variable DIDSERVE is only collected during Round 1 of the MEPS interview.  It indicates if
          the person ever served in the Armed Forces.  Persons under the age of 16 were coded as 3 "under 
          16-inapplicable."  Individuals currently on active duty military service were coded as 4 "now
          active duty."  Those individuals entering a MEPS household after Round 1 have DIDSERVE set
          to -1. Like DIDSERVE, data on service in specific eras was only collected during Round 1 of the
          MEPS interview.  Individuals who were ever in the military (DIDSERVE=1) were asked if they
          served in either World War I or World War II (VETWW), the Korean War era (VETKOR), the
          Vietnam War era (VETVIET), the Post-Vietnam War era (VETPVIET), or another service era
          (VETOTH). Persons entering a MEPS household after Round 1 have these variables set to -1. 
          Those under the age of 16 were coded as 3 "under 16-inapplicable" and those who never served in
          the military were coded as 4 "never in military".
         The user should note that the DIDSERVE and veteran status variables were reviewed for
          consistency.  The veteran status variables were minimally edited to insure that all individuals
          under 16 years of age were coded as 3 "under 16" for the specific veteran-era variables. However,
          no other age editing was performed, and thus it is possible for age/era inconsistencies to exist
          (e.g., AGE1X=17 and VETVIET=Yes).
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        Relationship to the Reference Person within Reporting Units
         For each reporting unit (RU), the person who owns or rents the dwelling unit is usually defined as
          the reference person. For student RUs, the student is defined as the reference person.  (For
          additional information on reference persons, see the documentation on survey administration
          variables.)  The variables REFREL1X, REFREL2X, and RFREL96X indicate the relationship of
          each individual to the reference person of the reporting unit (RU) in a given round.  For the
          reference person, this variable has the value "self"; for all other persons in the RU, relationship to
          the reference person is indicated by codes representing "husband/spouse", "wife/spouse", "son",
  "daughter", "female partner", "male partner," etc.  A code of 91, meaning "other related", was
          used to indicate rarely observed relationship descriptions such as "mother of partner."  If the
          relationship of an individual to the reference person was not ascertained during the Round-specific interview, relationships between other RU members were used, where possible, to assign
          a relationship to the reference person.  If MEPS data from calendar year 1996 were not sufficient
          to identify the relationship of an individual to the reference person, relationship variables from the
          1995 NHIS data were used to assign a relationship.  In the event that a meaningful value could not
          be determined or data were missing, the relationship variable was assigned a missing value code.
         For 262 cases, where two individuals' relationship indicated they were spouses, but both had
          marital status indicating they were not married, their relationship was changed to nonmarital
          partners.  In addition, the relationship variables were edited to insure that they did not change
          across rounds for RUs in which the reference person did not change, with the exception of
          relationships identified as partner, spouse, or foster relationships.
         Parent Identifiers
         The constructed  MOMPIDnX and DADPIDnX  variables are round specific and are used to
          identify the parents (biological, adopted, or step) of the person represented on that record. 
          MOMPIDnX contains the person identifier (PID) for each individual's mother if she lived in the
          dwelling unit in Rounds 1 through 2 (n = Round number) of the survey, or a value of
  "inapplicable" (-1) if she did not.  Similarly, DADPIDnX contains the person identifier (PID) for
          each individual's father if he lived in the dwelling unit (DU) during the round, or a value of
  "inapplicable" (-1) if he did not.  MOMPIDnX and DADPIDnX were constructed based on
          information collected in the relationship grid in the Round 1 - 2 instrument at questions RE76 and
          RE77 and include biological, adopted, and step parents.
         Edits were performed to ensure that MOMPIDnX and DADPIDnX were consistent with each
          individual's age, sex, and other relationships within the family.  For instance, the  gender of the
          parent must be consistent with the indicated relationship, mothers are at least 12 years older than
          the person, and no more than 55 years older than the person, fathers are at least 12 years older than
          the person, each person has no more than one mother and no more than one father, any values set
          for MOMPIDnX/DADPIDnX were removed for any person identified as a foster child, and the
          PID for the person's mother and father are valid PIDs for that person's DU in that Round. For
          persons who were not present in the household during the round, MOMPIDnX and DADPIDnX
          have values of  "inapplicable" (-1).
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         3.3	Income and Tax Filing Variables (SSIDISAB-REFDIMP)
         The file provides income and tax-related variables that were constructed primarily from data
          collected in the Round 3 Income Section.  Person-level income amounts have been edited and
          imputed for every record on the full-year file, with detailed imputation flags provided as a guide
          to the method of editing.  The tax-filing variables and some program participation variables are
          unedited as discussed below.
         Logical editing or weighted, sequential hot-deck imputation was used to impute income amounts
          for missing values (both for item non-response and for persons in the full-year file who were not
          in Round 3).  Reported income components were generally left unedited (with the few exceptions
          noted below).  Thus, analysts using these data may wish to apply additional checks for outlier
          values that would appear to stem from misreporting.
         The editing process began with wage and salary income, WAGEPNX.  Complete responses were
          left unedited, and the associated imputation flag was set to WAGEIMP=1.  The only exception
          was for a small number of persons who reported zero wage and salary income despite having been
          employed for pay during the year according to round level data (see below).   Since data on tax
          filing and on taxable income sources were collected using an approach that encouraged
          respondents to provide information from their federal tax returns, logical edits were used to assign
          separate income amounts to married persons whose responses were based on combined income
          amounts on their joint tax returns.
         The second group (WAGEIMP=2) consisted of persons who provided broad income ranges rather
          than giving specific dollar amounts.  We used weighted sequential hot-decking to provide these
          individuals with specific dollar amounts.  For this imputation, donors were persons who gave
          specific dollar amounts within the corresponding broad income ranges.  All WAGEPNX hot-deck
          imputations used cells defined on the basis of a conventional list of person-level characteristics
          including age, education, employment status, race, sex, and region.
         The third group (WAGEIMP=3) were persons who did not report wage and salary income and
          who were assigned WAGEPNX=0 based on either being under 16 or not having been employed
          during the year.
         The fourth group (WAGEIMP=4) consisted of persons who did not provide valid dollar amounts
          or dollar ranges, but for whom we had information from the employment sections of Rounds 1, 2,
          and 3 concerning wages, hours, and weeks worked (in all jobs).   We used these data to construct
          annualized wage amounts that we used in place of missing annual wage and salary data.  
          Comparisons of reported and constructed wages and salaries using persons who provided both
          sorts of information made us highly confident that employment data could be reliably used to fill
          in missing wage and salary information (the two measures were highly correlated and the means
          differed by less than $20).  To implement this approach, part-year responders were assumed to be
          fully-employed during the remainder of the year if they were employed during the period in which
          they provided data  the exception being those who left due to death or institutionalization.  These
          persons were assigned zero wages and salaries for the time they were not in MEPS.
         Remaining persons with missing WAGEPNX were hot-decked amounts from donor pools that
          included persons whose WAGEPNX amounts were edited in the steps described above. 
          Whenever possible, the hot-deck imputations used data on whether or not the person had been
          employed at any point during the year (and, if available, the number of weeks worked).   Persons
          deemed to have been employed were hot-decked in conditional imputations that used only donors
          with positive WAGEPNX amounts (WAGEIMP=5).  Remaining persons were hot-decked
          WAGEPNX in an unconditional imputation that used both workers and nonworkers as donors
          (WAGEIMP=6).
         Having edited WAGEPNX for all persons in the full-year file, we then edited the remaining
          income sources in the following sequence: INTRPNX, BUSNPNX, FARMPNX, DIVDPNX,
          REFDPNX, ALIMPNX, SALEPNX, TRSTPNX, PENSPNX, IRASPNX, SSECPNX,
          UNEMPNX, WCMPPNX, VETSPNX, CASHPNX, OTHRPNX, CHLDPNX, SSIPNX, and
          PUBPNX.  Income components were edited sequentially, in each case using information
          regarding income amounts that had already been edited (so as to maintain patterns of correlation
          across income sources whenever possible).  In all cases, bracketed responses were edited first
          (using hot-deck imputations from donors in corresponding brackets who gave specific dollar
          amounts), followed by hot-decking for remaining missing values.  The hot-deck imputations used
          cells defined on the basis of income amounts already edited and a conventional list of person-level
          characteristics such as age, education, employment status, race, sex, and region.  In addition, hot-deck imputations for CHLDPNX used family-level information concerning marital status and the
          number of children.  SSIPNX and PUBPNX were also hotdecked in part using simulated program
          eligibility indicators that integrated state-level program eligibility criteria with data on family
          composition and income.
         Reported income amounts less than 1 dollar were treated as missing amounts (to be hotdecked
          from donors with positive amounts of the corresponding income source).  Also, a very few cases
          of outlier responses were edited (primarily public sources of income that exceeded possible
          amounts).   With only one other exception, reported income amounts were left unchanged.  The
          exception is Social Security Income, SSECPNX, which was under-reported in the MEPS by
          approximately 25 percent relative to the March 1997 Current Population Survey (CPS). 
          Comparison with the CPS identified the source of the MEPS under reporting to be persons aged
          65 and older who failed to report any SSECPNX despite having also reported no earned income. 
          Persons over 65 with neither earnings nor Social Security income are quite rare in the CPS, giving
          us confidence in editing these responses.  Using the CPS, a probabilistic model was developed to
          select persons/couples whose values of SSECPNX were changed from zero to a positive
          (imputed) amount.
         For all of the income components, xxIMP variables contain indicators concerning the method for
          editing/imputation.  All the flag variables have the following formatted values:  1=Original
          response used; 2=Bracket converted; 3=Missing value set to 0; 4=Weeks worked/earnings used
          (WAGEIMP only); 5=Conditional hotdeck; 6=Unconditional hotdeck.  Missing values were set to
          zero when there were too few recipients to warrant hotdecking positive values (as in the case of
          ALIMPNX received by males or WAGEPNX received by persons under age 16).  Conditional
          hotdecks refer to cases where the respondent indicated receipt but not a specific dollar amount.  In
          these cases, the donor pool was restricted to persons with nonzero amounts of the income source
          in question.  Unconditional hotdecks expanded the donor pool to include persons receiving both
          zero and nonzero amounts (implemented in cases where we had little or no information about
          whether the person received the income source or not).
         Total person-level income (TTLPNX) is the sum of all income components with the exception of
          REFDPNX and SALEPNX (so that we are following as closely as possible the CPS definition of
          income).  Some researchers may wish to define their own income measure by adding in one or
          both of these excluded components.
         The tax variables, food stamp variables, SSI disability flag, and AFDC participation flag are all
          completely unedited.  In particular, while the tax variables are provided to assist researchers
          building tax simulation programs, they contain substantial item nonresponse, and no effort was
          made to eliminate inconsistencies with other MEPS data.  All of these unedited variables should
          be used with great care.
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        Income Top-Coding
         All income amounts on the file, including both total income and the separate sources of income,
          were top coded to preserve confidentiality.  For each income source, top codes were applied to the
          top percentile of all cases (including negative amounts that exceeded income thresholds in
          absolute value).  In cases where fewer than one percent of all persons received a particular income
          source, we top-coded all recipients.  Top-coded income amounts were masked using a regression-based approach.  The regressions relied on many of the same variables used in the hot-deck
          imputations, with the dependent variable in each case being the natural logarithm of the amount
          that the income component was in excess of its top-code threshold.  Predicted values from this
          regression were reconverted from logarithms to levels using a smearing correction, and these
          predicted amounts were then added back to the top-code thresholds.  This approach preserves the
          component-by-component weighted means (both overall and among top-coded cases), while also
          preserving much of the income distribution conditional on the variables contained in our
          regressions.  At the same time, this approach ensures that every reported amount in excess of its
          respective threshold is altered on the public use file.  The process of top-coding income amounts
          in this way inevitably introduces measurement error in cases where income amounts were
          reported correctly by respondents.  Note, however, that top-coding can also help to reduce the
          impact of outliers that occur due to misreporting.
         Total income is constructed as the sum of the adjusted income components.  Having constructed
          total income in this manner, we then top-coded this total using the same regression-based
          procedure described above (again masking the top percentile of cases).  Finally, we scaled the
          components of income up or down in order to make the sources of income consistent with the
          newly-adjusted totals.
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         Poverty Status
         The file includes a categorical variable for 1996 family income as a percentage of poverty
          (POVCAT).  This variable was constructed primarily from data collected in the Round 3 Income
          Section.  Logical editing or weighted, sequential hot-deck imputation was used to impute income
          amounts for missing values (both for item non-response and for persons in the full-year file who
          were not in Round 3).   Round-level data on employment status, hours worked, and wages were
          used to supplement earnings data collected in the Income Section.   Family income was
          constructed by constructing person-level total income comprising annual earnings from wages,
          salaries, bonuses, tips, commissions;  business and farm gains and losses; unemployment and
          workman's compensation; interest and dividends; alimony, child support, and other private cash
          transfers; private pensions, IRA withdrawals, social security, and veterans payments;
          supplemental security income and cash welfare payments from public assistance, Aid to Families
          with Dependent Children, and Aid to Dependent Children; gains or losses from estates, trusts,
          partnerships, S corporations, rent, and royalties; and a small amount of "other" income.   Family
          income excluded tax refunds and capital gains.  Person-level income totals were then summed
          over family members as defined by CPSFAMID to yield the family-level total.  POVCAT is
          constructed by dividing family income by the applicable poverty line (based on family size and
          composition), with the resulting percentages grouped into the following 5 categories:
           1. negative or poor (LT 100% poverty line)
           2. near poor (100-124% poverty line)
           3. low income (125-199% poverty line
           4. middle income (200-399% poverty line)
           5. high income (GE 400% poverty line)
           Persons missing CPSFAMID were treated as one-person families in constructing
          POVCAT.
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         3.4	Employment Variables (EMPST1-YCHJB231)
         Employment questions were asked of all persons 16 years and older at the time of the interview. 
          Employment variables consist of person level indicators such as employment status and job
          related variables such as hourly wage.  All job variables refer to a person's current main job.  The
          current main job, defined by the respondent, indicates the main source of employment.
         Most employment variables pertain to status as of December 31, 1996; however, some variables
          refer to previous rounds and indicate the status as of that particular round's interview date.  The
          numbers in the variable name identify 12/31/96 or the round to which the variable relates.  For
          example, COCCP1 and COCCP2 refer to, respectively, condensed occupation codes for a current
          main job held on the Round 1 and Round 2 interview dates, while COCCP96 refers to the
          condensed occupation code of the current main job held on December 31, 1996.
         With the exception of health insurance held and offered from a current main job, no attempt has
          been made to logically edit any employment variables.  When missing, values were imputed for
          certain persons' hourly wage; however, there was no editing of any values reported by the
          respondent.  With the exception of the variables indicating whether the employer has more than
          one location (MORE1, MORE2 and MORE96), all job-related variables that describe an employer
          refer to the establishment that is the location of a person's current main job.
         In Rounds 2 and 3, the MEPS employment section used dependent interviewing.  If employment
          status and certain job characteristics did not change from the previous round, the respondent was
          skipped through the employment section.  A code of -2 is used to indicate that the information in
          question was obtained in a previous round.  For example, if the HRWG96X (hourly wage for
          current main job as of December 31st) is coded as a -2, refer back to the Round 2 hourly wage
          (HRWG2X) or to the Round 1 hourly wage (HRWG1X)  if a  -2 also appears for Round 2.  Note
          that there may be a value for the Round 2 or Round 1 hourly wage or there may be an inapplicable
          code.  A value of -2 simply indicates that the person was skipped past the question at the time of
          the interview.  Obviously, to determine who should be skipped through various employment
          questions, certain information, such as employment status, had to be asked at every round and,
          thus, -2 codes do not apply to employment status.  Additionally, information on whether the
          person currently worked at more than one job and whether the person held health insurance from a
          current main employer were asked in every round, and, therefore, also have no  -2 codes.
         Employment Status (EMPST1, EMPST2 and EMPST96)
         Employment status was asked for all persons aged 16 or older.  Responses to the employment
          status question were: currently employed for pay, not currently employed but have a job to return
          to, not currently employed but had a job during the round, and not currently employed and did not
          have a job during the reference period.  These responses are mutually exclusive.  A current main
          job was defined for persons reporting that they were currently employed and who identified a
          current main job, and for persons who reported and identified a job to return to.  Therefore, job-related information such as hourly wage exists for persons not presently working at the interview
          date but who have a job to return to.
         If a person was not working at any of the round interview dates or at December 31st, an attempt
          was made to determine the main reason why the person was not working. The variables NWK1,
          NWK2, and NWK96 indicate the various reasons that were given in the questionnaire as well as
          an other category.
         Note, for the response "retired", no attempt was made to cross check with the question concerning
          whether a person ever retired (EVRET96).  The latter is dependent on the individual being 55 or
          older.  The NWK response of retired is not related to a person's age.
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         Self-employed (SELFCM1, SELFCM2 and SELFCM96)
         Information on whether an individual was self-employed as the current main job was obtained for
          all persons who reported a current main job.  Certain questions, namely those regarding benefits
          and hourly wage, were not asked of the self-employed.  These variables indicate whether the
          establishment reported by wage earners as their main source of employment offered the following
          fringe benefits:
           Paid sick leave to visit a doctor (PAYDR1, PAYDR2 and PAYDR96)
           Paid sick leave (SICPAY1, SICPAY2 and SICPAY96)
           Paid vacation (PAYVAC1, PAYVAC2 and PAYVAC96)
           Pension plan (RETPLN1, RETPLN2 and RETPLN96)
         Those who were self-employed at their defined current main job are coded as inapplicable (-1) in
          all these variables.  Additionally, information on whether the firm has more than one
          establishment (MORE1, MORE2 and MORE96), and whether the establishment is a private for
          profit, nonprofit or a government entity (JOBORG1, JOBORG2 and JOBORG96) is not
          applicable for self-employed persons. Conversely, the variables that measure whether a business
          is incorporated, a proprietorship, or a partnership (BSNTY1, BSNTY2 and BSNTY96) apply only
          to those who are self-employed at their current main job.
         Hourly wage (HRWG1X-HRHOW96)
         Hourly wage was asked of all persons aged 16 or older who reported a current main job that was
          not self-employment.  An hourly wage was imputed using a weighted sequential hot-deck
          procedure for those identified as having a current main job which was not self-employment and
          who did not know their wage or refused to report a wage.  Hourly wage for persons whose
          employment status or self-employment status was not known was coded as not ascertained (-9). 
          Additionally, wages were imputed for wage earners reporting a wage range and not a specific
          value.  For these persons, values were imputed from within the reported range.   All imputed
          wages can be identified by the wage imputation flag (HRWGIM1, HRWGIM2 and HRWGIM96). 
          Note, wages were imputed only for persons with a positive person weight.
         The variables HRHOW1, HRHOW2 and HRHOW96 indicates how the respective round hourly
          wages were constructed.  Hourly wage was derived, as applicable, from a large number of source
          variables.  In the simplest case, hourly wage was reported directly by the respondent.  For other
          persons, construction of the hourly wage was based upon their salary, the time period on which
          the salary was based, and the number of hours worked per time period.  If the number of hours
          worked per time period was not available, a value of 40 hours per week was assumed, as
          identified in the HRHOW variable.  It should be noted that the HRHOW and HRWGIM variables
          may differ.  As mentioned above, wage imputations were performed on persons with positive
          weights only, while HRHOW will apply to persons with a zero person level weight.
         Health Insurance
         There are several employment-related health insurance measures included in this release: health
          insurance held from a current main job (HELD1X, HELD2X and HELD96X), health insurance
          offered from a current main job (OFFER1X, OFFER2X and OFFER96X), and two indicators of
          whether the individual had a choice of health plans to choose from at their current main job
          (CHOIC1, CHOIC2 and CHOIC96).  The held and offer variables were logically edited using
          health insurance information not available for public release.
         Several persons indicated that they held health insurance through a current main job in the
          employment section and then denied this coverage later in the interview in the health insurance
          section.  Employment section health insurance held variables were edited for consistency to match
          the health insurance measures obtained in the health insurance section as noted above. To allow
          for easy identification of these individuals, round-specific flag variables were constructed
          (DISVW1X, DISVW2X and DISVW96X).
         Responses for health insurance held in the employment section were recoded to be consistent with
          the variables in the health insurance section of the survey. Due to questionnaire skip patterns, the
          responses to health insurance offered were affected by editing the held variable.  For example, if a
          person responded that health insurance was held from a current main job, the question relating to
          whether health insurance was offered was skipped.  For persons who responded that they held
          health insurance coverage in the employment section and then disavowed the coverage in the
          health insurance section, we could not ascertain whether they were offered a policy.  These
          individuals are coded as -9 in the offer questions.
         Finally, persons under age 16 as well as persons aged 16 and older who did not hold a current
          main job or who were self-employed with no employees were coded as inapplicable.
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         Hours (HOUR1, HOUR2 and HOUR96)
         Hours worked per week is a combination of two MEPS employment section measures.  For
          salaried persons, the hours measure refers to the hours per week on which the salary is based.  For
          all others, the hours measure refers to usual hours worked per week.
         Number of Employees at Establishment (NUMEMP1, NUMEMP2, NUMEMP96)
         Respondents were asked to provide the number of persons employed at the site of their current
          main job.  If they were unsure they were asked to estimate a range.  In these cases the median
          value of the range was used to impute a value.  For confidentiality reasons establishment size was
          top coded at 500 or more employees. Note, self-employed respondents were asked to provide the
          number of persons employed at there business which might include more than one site.
         Other Employment Variables
         Industry type was coded from verbatim text fields by trained coders and represent 3-digit industry
          codes defined by the Bureau of the Census for the 1990 Census.  This coding system is consistent
          with the Standard Industrial Classification System (SIC).  See U.S. Department of Commerce,
          Bureau of the Census, 1990 Census of Population, Alphabetical Index of Industries and
          Occupations, Final Edition, 1990.  Due to confidentiality concerns, this file contains a condensed
          version of the industry code variable for Rounds 1 and 2 as well as for December 31 (CIND1,
          CIND2, and CIND96).
         Occupation codes, as Industry Type, were from verbatim text and represent occupations defined at
          the 3-digit level by the US Census Bureau's 1990 Occupational Classification System.  Again,
          due to confidentiality concerns, this file contains only a condensed version of the occupation code
          variable for Rounds 1 and 2 and for December 31 (COCCP1, COCCP2 and COCCP96).
         Information indicating whether a person belonged to a labor union (UNION1, UNION2 and
          UNION96) and whether a person worked an irregular work shift (SHFTWK1, SHFTWK2 and
          SHFTWK96) is also contained in this release.  In addition, there are three round specific
          variables, which show the usual daily start time of the current main job (BGNWK1, BGNWK2,
          and BGNWK96).  There are also three measures of the usual daily ending time of the current main
          job (ENDWK1, ENDWK2, and ENDWK96).  The values for these variables are coded in 24-hour
          military time and reflect the hour that the respondent reported as the usual starting and ending
          time.  For the third round of interviewing, an additional response was added to the questions
          relating to usual start and end times.  This response allowed respondents to report that their usual
          start and end times varied.  This new response was captured in the December 31st variables
          BGNWK96 and ENDWK96 and is indicated by a value of 95.
         The day, month, and year that the current main job started for Rounds 1, 2 and December 31st are
          provided on this release (STJBDD1, STJBMM1, STJBYY1, STJBDD2, STJBMM2, STJBYY2,
          STJBDD96, STJBMM96, and STJBYY96).
         There are two measures included in this release that relate to a person's work history over a
          lifetime.  One indicates whether a person ever retired from a job as of December 31st (EVRET96)
          and the other indicates whether a person ever worked for pay as of December 31st (EVRWRK). 
          The latter was asked of everyone who indicated that they were not working as of the Round
          interview date.  Therefore, anyone who indicated that they were currently employed or had a job
          during any of the previous or current rounds was skipped past the question identifying whether
          they ever worked for pay.  These individuals were coded as inapplicable (-1).  The ever retired
          questions was asked of all person who ever reported a job and were 55 years or older as of
          December 31st.  Since both of these variables are not round specific, there are no -2 codes.
         A measure of whether an individual had more than one job (MOREJOB1, MORJOB2 and
          MORJOB96) is provided on this release.  In addition to those under 16 and those individuals who
          were out of scope, the inapplicable category includes those who did not report having a current
          main job.
         This release contains variables indicating a current main job change between the first and second
          rounds (CHNGJ12) and between the second round and December 31st (CHNGJ231).  In addition
          to the inapplicable, refused, and don't know categories, the change job variables were coded to
          represent the following: 1 - person left previous round current main job and now has a new
          current main job; 2 - person still working at the previous round's current main job but as of the
          new round no longer considers this job to be the current main job and defines a new main job
          (previous round's current main job is now a current miscellaneous job); 3 - left previous round's
          current main job and does not have a new job; and, 4 - did not change current main job.
         Finally, this release contains the reason given by the respondent for the job change (YCHJB12 and
          YCHJB231).  The reasons for a job change were listed in the CAPI questionnaire and a
          respondent was asked to choose the main reason from this list.  In addition to those out of scope,
          those under 16, and those not having a current main job, the inapplicable category for YCHJB12
          and YCHJB231 includes workers who did not change jobs.
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         3.5	Insurance Variables
         The HC12 file includes Round 1 health insurance coverage variables (described in Section 3.5.1),
          monthly insurance coverage variables for 1996 (described in Section 3.5.2) and a summary full
          year 1996 insurance indicator variable (described in Section 3.5.3).
         3.5.1	Round 1 Health Insurance Variables (CHMPNOW1-INSURED1)
         Constructed variables are provided for each source of health insurance coverage identified during
          the MEPS Panel 1, Round 1 interview. With the exception of Medicaid and Medicare, the
          constructed variables represent sources of insurance as reported by respondents. Minimal editing
          was performed on the Medicare and Medicaid variables to assign persons to coverage from these
          sources. All other coverage types are unedited and unimputed. Observations that contain edits can
          be identified by comparing the edited and unedited versions of the Medicaid and Medicare
          variables.
         Public sources include Medicare, CHAMPUS/CHAMPVA (CHMPNOW1), Medicaid and other
          public hospital/physician coverage.  Coverage through state sponsored programs that provide
          limited benefits (STATPRG1), for example, the Maryland Kidney Disease Program was also
          identified but is not considered comprehensive health insurance for the purpose of this survey. The
          Medicare and CHAMPUS/CHAMPVA variables indicate coverage at the time of the Round 1
          interview date. All other public sources of insurance (including STATPRG1) indicate coverage at
          any time during Round 1.
         Medicare
         Medicare (MCARNOW1) coverage was edited (MCARNW1X) for persons age 65 or over. Within
          this age group, individuals were assigned Medicare coverage if:
           1.	They answered yes to a follow-up question on whether or not they received Social Security
          benefits; or
           2.	They were covered by Medicaid, other public hospital/physician coverage or Medigap
          coverage; or
           3.	Their spouse was covered by Medicare.
         Medicaid and Other Public Hospital/Physician Coverage
         Questions about other public hospital/physician coverage were asked in an attempt to identify
          Medicaid recipients who may not have recognized their coverage as Medicaid. These questions
          were asked only if a respondent did not report Medicaid directly. Respondents reporting other
          public hospital/physician coverage were asked follow-up questions to determine if their coverage
          was through a specific Medicaid HMO or if it included some other managed care characteristics.
          Respondents who identified managed care from either path were asked if they paid anything for the
          coverage and/or if a government source paid for the coverage. In an attempt to identify coverage
          through Medicaid expansion programs, persons with private insurance that was not employment-related were also asked if any government agency contributed toward their premium.
         The Medicaid variable (MCAID1) was edited (MCAID1X) to include persons who did not pay
          anything for their Other public hospital/physician insurance when such coverage was through a
          Medicaid HMO or reported to include some other managed care characteristics. In addition, a
          small number of persons reporting AFDC or SSI coverage (questions included in the Round 1
          interview for this purpose) were assigned Medicaid coverage.
         To assist users in further editing sources of insurance, this file contains variables constructed from
          the other public hospital/physician series that measure whether:
           1.	The respondent reported some type of managed care and paid something for the
          coverage (OTPUBA1);
           2.	The respondent did not report any managed care (OTPUBB1);
           3.	A federal, state or local government paid anything toward the cost of the managed
          care coverage (OTGOVPY1).
         Variables are also included from the private insurance series that identify whether the federal
          government (PRGVPYA1) or a state/local government (PRGVPYB1) contributed toward the
          private non-employment related insurance. The variables OTPUBA1, OTPUBB1, OTGOVPY1, 
          PRGVPYA1 and PRGVPYB1 are provided only to assist in editing and should not be used to
          make insurance estimates.
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         Private Insurance
         Variables identifying private insurance in general (PRIV1) and specific private insurance sources
          [employer group (PRIVEG1); union group (PRIVU1); insurance through a self-employed job with
          firm size of one (PRIVS1); non-group (PRIVNG1); and other group (PRIVOG1)] were
          constructed. Private insurance sources identify coverage in effect at any time during Round 1.
          Separate variables identify covered persons and policyholders (policyholder variables begin with
          the letter "H"). These variables indicate coverage or policyholder status within a source and do not
          distinguish between persons who are covered or are policyholders on one or more than one policy
          within a given source. In some cases, the respondent was unable to characterize the source of
          insurance (PRIVDK1). Covered persons (but not policyholders) are identified when the
          policyholder is living outside the RU (PRIVOUT1). A source was considered to provide insurance
          if, at a minimum, coverage was provided for hospital and physician services. Sources of insurance
          with missing information regarding the type of coverage were assumed to contain
          hospital/physician coverage. Persons without private hospital/physician insurance were not counted
          as privately insured.
         Health insurance through a job (PRIVEG1, PRIVU1, PRIVS1) was initially asked about in the
          Employment Section of the interview and later confirmed in the Health Insurance Section.
          Respondents also had an opportunity to report employer group (PRIVEG1) and union sponsored
          (PRIVU1) insurance for the first time in the Health Insurance Section, but this insurance was not
          linked to a specific job. Insurance that was initially reported in the Employment Section contained
          information on whether the insurance was sponsored through the employer, a union or both. If both
          the employer and union or the employer alone sponsored the insurance through a particular job that
          insurance is classified as employer group insurance only. If the insurance was sponsored solely
          through a union it was classified as union sponsored insurance.
         All insurance reported to be through a job classified as self-employed with firm size of 1 (PRIVS1)
          was initially reported in the Employment Section and verified in the Health Insurance Section.
          Unlike the other employment-related variables, self-employed-firm size 1 (PRIVS1) health
          insurance could not be reported in the Health Insurance section for the first time. The variable
          PRIVS1 has been constructed to allow users to determine if the insurance should be considered
          employment-related.
         Private insurance that was not employment-related (PRIVOG1, PRIVNG1, PRIVDK1, and
          PRIVOUT1) was reported in the Health Insurance Section only.
         Public Insurance Coverage and Any Insurance in Round 1
         Persons identified as insured in Round 1 are those reporting coverage under Medicare, Medicaid,
          CHAMPUS/CHAMPVA, other public hospital/physician or private hospital/physician insurance
          (including Medigap plans). A person is considered uninsured if not covered by one of these
          insurance sources.
         As stated earlier, persons covered only by state-specific programs (STATPRG1) and those
          reporting private insurance without hospital/physician benefits (for example, private insurance for
          dental or vision care only, accidents or specific diseases) were not considered to be insured when
          constructing the variables INSURED1, PUBLIC1 and PRIV1.
         Round 1 HMO Variables:  Medicare
         If a person receives coverage from Medicare, then MCRHMO1 was coded "yes" if they identified
          their plan from a list shown to them of Medicare HMOs in their area or if they answered "yes" to
          either of the following questions (HX32,HX32A):
           (1)		Now I will ask you a question about how (PERSON)'s Medicare works for non-emergency care.  (When answering this question, please include only insurance
          from Medicare, not any privately purchased insurance.)
           (Are/Is) (PERSON) signed up with an HMO, that is a Health Maintenance
          Organization?  With an HMO, you generally receive care from HMO
          physicians.
           (2)		Does Medicare require (PERSON) to sign up with a certain primary care doctor,
          group of doctors, or with a certain clinic which they must go to for all of their
          routine care?
         MCRHMO1 is set to "no" when the person is not enrolled in an HMO and also when it is not
          possible to ascertain HMO enrollment status.  MCRHMO1 is set to "inapplicable" for persons who
          are not covered by Medicare.
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         Round 1 HMO Variables:  Private Insurance
         The variable UPRHMO1 identifies persons covered by private insurance who reported that their
          insurance was purchased through an HMO, if the insurance company was an HMO, or if the plan
          was described as an HMO.  In all cases the respondent answered a question using the term "HMO." 
          UPRHMO1 is set to "yes" if the person is covered by private insurance and any of the three
          following conditions are met:
           1.	 If the person reported purchasing his/her insurance directly through an HMO (HX03,
          HX23);
           2.	If the person reporting private insurance coverage identified the type of insurance company
          as an HMO (HX49, HX51, HX54);
           3.	If the person answered yes to the following question (MC01):
           Now I will ask you a few questions about how (POLICYHOLDER)'s health insurance
          through (ESTABLISHMENT) works for non-emergency care.
           We are interested in knowing if (POLICYHOLDER)'s (ESTABLISHMENT) plan is an
          HMO, that is, a Health Maintenance Organization.  With an HMO, you must generally
          receive care from HMO physicians.  For other doctors, the expense is not covered
          unless you were referred by the HMO or there was a medical emergency.  Is
          (POLICYHOLDER)'s (INSURER NAME) an HMO?
         UPRHMO1 is set to "no"when the person was not enrolled in an HMO and also when it was not
          possible to ascertain HMO enrollment status.  UPRHMO1 is set to "inapplicable" for persons who
          are not covered by private insurance and were not asked the managed care questions.
         The variable UPRMNC1 identifies persons enrolled in a gatekeeper plan.  The household
          respondent has not identified the plan as an HMO but has identified a characteristic of the plan that
          requires plan members to sign up with a gatekeeper for all routine care (the exact question is given
          below).  In 1996 this gatekeeper feature is associated with HMO plans and with some PPO plans. 
          Users of the data can decide how to classify these persons.  UPRMNC1 is set to "yes" if the person
          is covered by private insurance and the following condition is met:
           1.	If the person answered no to the HMO question (MC01) and yes to the following question
          (MC02):
           (Do/Does) (POLICYHOLDER)'s insurance plan require (POLICYHOLDER) to sign up
          with a certain primary care doctor, group of doctors, or a certain clinic which
          (POLICYHOLDER) must go to for all of (POLICYHOLDER)'s routine care?
           Probe: Do not include emergency care or care from a specialist you were referred to.
         If a person is covered by more than one plan or source of private insurance then UPRHMO1 and
          UPRMNC1 are coded "yes" if any of the plans are identified as HMO plans or as gatekeeper plans. 
          UPRMNC1 is set to "no" when the person was not enrolled in a gatekeeper plan and also when it
          was not possible to ascertain managed care enrollment status. UPRMNC1 is set to "inapplicable"
          for persons who are not covered by private insurance and were not asked the managed care
          questions.
         Round 1 HMO Variables:  Medicaid
         If a person is covered by Medicaid or by some other public program that provides
          hospital/physician insurance coverage, then the variable UPUBHMO1 is set to "yes" if the person
          picks their plan from a list shown to them of Medicaid HMOs in the area or if they answer yes to
          the following question:
           1.	Under {{Medicaid/{STATE NAME FOR MEDICAID}}/the program sponsored by a state
          or local government agency which provides hospital and physician benefits} (are/is)
          (READ NAME(S) FROM BELOW) signed up with an HMO, that is a Health Maintenance
          Organization?
           [With an HMO, you must generally receive care from HMO physicians.  If another doctor
          is seen, the expense is not covered unless you were referred by the HMO, or there was a
          medical emergency.]
         The variable UPUBMNC1 identifies persons covered by Medicaid or other public
          hospital/physician insurance who are enrolled in a plan or program with a gatekeeper feature. 
          Programs with this feature include the Medicaid primary care case management program. 
          UPUBMNC1 is set to "yes" if the person is covered by Medicaid or other public hospital/medical
          insurance who answers yes to the following question:
           1.	Does {{Medicaid/{STATE NAME FOR MEDICAID}}/the program sponsored by a state
          or local government agency which provides hospital and physician benefits} require
          (READ NAME(S) FROM BELOW) to sign up with a certain primary care doctor, group of
          doctors, or with a certain clinic which they must go to for all of their routine care?
           PROBE: Do not include emergency care or care from a specialist they were referred to.
         UPUBHMO1 and UPUBMNC1 are set to "no" when the person is not enrolled in a Medicaid or
          public HMO and also when it is not possible to ascertain HMO enrollment status.  UPUBHMO1 is
          set to "inapplicable" for persons who are not covered by Medicaid or other public programs and
          were not asked the managed care questions.
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         3.5.2	Full Year Monthly Health Insurance Variables (CHJA96X-INSDE96X)
         Constructed and edited variables are provided that indicate any coverage in each month of 1996 for
          the sources of health insurance coverage collected during the MEPS interviews (Rounds 1 through
          3).   In Rounds 2 and 3, insurance that was in effect at the previous round's interview date was
          reviewed with the respondent.  Most of the insurance variables have been logically edited  to
          address issues that arose during such reviews in Rounds 2 and 3.  One edit to the private insurance
          variables corrects for a problem concerning covered benefits which occurred when respondents
          reported a change in any of their private health insurance plan name.  Additional edits address
          issues of missing data on the time period of coverage for both public and private coverage that was
          either reviewed or initially reported in a given round.  For CHAMPUS/CHAMPVA coverage,
          respondents who were classified as active duty military or who were over age 65 had their reported
          CHAMPUS/CHAMPVA coverage overturned.  Additional edits, described below, were performed
          on the Medicare and Medicaid variables to assign persons to coverage from these sources. 
          Observations that contain edits assigning persons to Medicare or Medicaid coverage can be
          identified by comparing the edited and unedited versions of the Medicare  and Medicaid variables.
         Public sources include Medicare, CHAMPUS/CHAMPVA, Medicaid and other public
          hospital/physician coverage.  State-specific program participation in non-comprehensive coverage
          (STAJA96-STADE96) was also identified but is not considered health insurance for the purpose of
          this survey.
         
         Medicare
         Medicare (MCRJA96-MCRDE96) coverage was edited (MCRJA96X-MCRDE96X) for persons
          age 65 or over.  Within this age group, individuals were assigned Medicare coverage if:
           They answered yes to a follow-up question on whether or not they received Social
          Security benefits; or
           They were covered by Medicaid, other public hospital/physician coverage or
          Medigap coverage; or
           Their spouse was age 65 or over and covered by Medicare; or
           They reported CHAMPUS/CHAMPVA coverage.
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         Medicaid and Other Public Hospital/Physician Coverage
         Questions about other public hospital/physician coverage were asked in an attempt to identify
          Medicaid recipients who may not have recognized their coverage as Medicaid.  These questions
          were asked only if a respondent did not report Medicaid directly.  Respondents reporting other
          public hospital/physician coverage were asked follow-up questions to determine if their coverage
          was through a specific Medicaid HMO or if it included some other managed care characteristics. 
          Respondents who identified managed care from either path were asked if they paid anything for the
          coverage and/or if a government source paid for the coverage.
         The Medicaid variables (MCDJA96-MCDDE96) have been edited (MCDJA96X-MCDDE96X) to
          include persons who paid nothing for their other public hospital/physician insurance when such
          coverage was through a Medicaid HMO or reported to include some other managed care
          characteristics. In addition, a small number of persons reporting AFDC or SSI coverage (questions
          included in the MEPS health insurance sections for this purpose) were assigned Medicaid
          coverage.
         To assist users in further editing sources of insurance, this file contains variables constructed from
          the other public hospital/physician series that measure whether:
           the respondent reported some type of managed care and paid something for the coverage,
          Other Public A Insurance (OPAJA96-OPADE96); and
           the respondent did not report any managed care, Other Public B Insurance (OPBJA96-OPBDE96).
         The variables OPAJA96-OPADE96 and OPBJA96-OPBDE96 are provided only to assist in
          editing and should not be used to make separate insurance estimates for these types of insurance
          categories.
         Any Public Insurance in Month
         The file also includes summary measures that indicate whether or not a sample person has any
          public insurance in a month (PUBJA96X-PUBDE96X).  Persons identified as covered by public
          insurance are those reporting coverage under CHAMPUS/CHAMPVA, Medicare, Medicaid or
          other public hospital/physician programs.  Persons covered only by state-specific programs that did
          not provide comprehensive coverage (STAJA96-STADE96), for example, Maryland Kidney
          Disease Program,  were not considered to have public coverage when constructing the variables
          PUBJA96X-PUBDE96X.
         Private Insurance
         Variables identifying private insurance in general (PRIJA96-PRIDE96) and specific private
          insurance sources [such as employer/union group insurance (PEGJA96-PEGDE96); non-group
          (PNGJA96-PNGDE96); and other group (POGJA96-POGDE96)] were constructed.  Private
          insurance sources identify coverage in effect at any time during each month of 1996.  Separate
          variables identify covered persons and policyholders (policyholder variables begin with the letter
  "H").  These variables indicate coverage or policyholder status within a source and do not
          distinguish between persons who are covered or are policyholders on one or more than one policy
          within a given source.  In some cases,  the policyholder was unable to characterize the source of
          insurance (PDKJA96-PDKDE96).  Covered persons (but not policyholders) are identified when the
          policyholder is living outside the RU (POUJA96-POUDE96).  An individual was considered to
          have private health insurance coverage if, at a minimum, that coverage provided benefits for 
          hospital and physician services.  Sources of insurance with  missing information regarding the type
          of coverage were assumed to contain hospital/physician coverage.  Persons  without  private
          hospital/physician  insurance were not counted as privately insured.
         Health insurance through a job or union (PEGJA96-PEGDE96, PRSJA96-PRSDE96) was initially
          asked about in the Employment Section of the interview and later confirmed in the Health
          Insurance Section. Respondents also had an opportunity to report employer and union group
          insurance  (PEGJA96-PEGDE96) for the first time in the Health Insurance Section, but this
          insurance was not linked to a specific job.
         All insurance reported to be through a job classified as self-employed, with firm size of 1
          (PRSJA96-PRSDE96) was initially reported in the Employment Section and verified in the Health
          Insurance Section.  Unlike the other employment-related variables (PEGJA96-PEGDE96), self-employed-firm size 1 (PRSJA96-PRSDE96) health insurance could not be reported in the Health
          Insurance section for the first time.  The variables PRSJA96-PRSDE96 have been constructed to
          allow users to determine if the insurance should be considered employment-related.
         Private insurance that was not employment-related (POGJA96-POGDE96, PNGJA96-PNGDE96,
          PDKJA96-PDKDE96 and POUJA96-POUDE96) was reported in the Health Insurance Section
          only.
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        Any Insurance in Month
         The file also includes summary measures that indicate whether or not a sample person has any
          insurance in a month (INSJA96X-INSDE96X).  Persons identified as insured are those reporting
          coverage under CHAMPUS/CHAMPVA, Medicare, Medicaid or other public hospital/physician or
          private hospital/physician insurance (including Medigap plans).  A person is considered uninsured
          if not covered by one of these insurance sources.
         Persons covered only by state-specific programs that provide non-comprehensive coverage
          (STAJA96-STADE96), for example, Maryland Kidney Disease Program, and those without
          hospital/physician benefits (for example, private insurance for dental or vision care only, accidents
          or specific diseases) were not considered to be insured when constructing the variables INSJA96X-INSDE96X.
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        3.5.3	1996 Summary Insurance Coverage Indicators (PRVEVER - INSCOV96)
         The variables PRVEVER-UNINSURD summarize health insurance coverage for the person in
          1996 for the following types of insurance: private (PRVEVER); CHAMPUS/CHAMPVA
          (CHPEVER); Medicaid (MCDEVER); Medicare (MCREVER); other public A (OPAEVER);
          other public B (OPBEVER).  Each variable was constructed based on the values of the
          corresponding 12 month to month health insurance variables (see Section 3.5.2).  A value of 1
          indicates that the person was covered for at least one day of at least one month during 1996.  A
          value of 2 indicates that the person was not covered for a given type of insurance for all of 1996. 
          The variable UNINSURD summarizes PRVEVER-OPBEVER.  Where PRVEVER-OPBEVER are
          all equal to 2, then UNINSURD equals 1; person was uninsured for all of 1996.  Otherwise
          UNINSURD is set to 2, not uninsured for some portion of 1996.
         For user convenience this file contains a constructed variable INSCOV96 that summarizes health
          insurance coverage for the person in 1996, with the following 3 values:
           1 = ANY PRIVATE ( Person had any private insurance coverage (including
          Champus/VA) any time during 1996)
           2 = PUBLIC ONLY (Person had only public insurance coverage during 1996)
           3 = UNINSURED ( Person was uninsured during all of 1996)
         Please note this variable categorizes Champus as private coverage.  If an analyst wishes to consider
          Champus public coverage, the variable can easily be reconstructed using the PRVEVER and
          CHMPEVER variables.
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        3.6	Pregnancy Indicator  Variables (PREGRD1-BIRTH96)
         Questions concerning pregnancies were asked of females ages 15 through 45.  Male respondents,
          and females younger than 15 or older than 45, were not asked these questions and were assigned
          not applicable codes (-1) to all pregnancy-related variables.
         Information on pregnancies was obtained in the Pregnancy Detail section of the interview. 
          Question CE07 asked whether anyone in the family had been pregnant at any time during the
          reference period.  If the answer was "yes", then the identity of the pregnant person(s) was obtained
          in question CE08.  Information was obtained (CE09) regarding whether this was the person's only
          pregnancy during the reference period.
         Question PG01 asked whether the named person was still pregnant.  If the response to PG01 was
  "no" (2), then the respondent was asked (PG02) whether the pregnancy had ended in a live birth. 
          Responses of "no" (codes of 2-5 in PG02) ended the series of questions about that pregnancy.  (If a
          women had multiple pregnancies during a reference period, additional questions asked about the
          outcomes of each other pregnancy.)  A response of "yes" (1) to PG02 led to a series of questions
          about pregnancy-related medical complications.  (These data, which are at the level of the
          individual pregnancy episode, are not included in this data release.)
         If the response to PG01 was "yes" (i.e.,
          the woman was still pregnant), then question PG11 asked how many weeks
          or months the woman had been pregnant. If the response was "refused" (-7)
          or
  "don't know" (-8), then the respondent was asked to indicate (PG12)
  a range of months for pregnancy duration (i.e., less than 3 months, 3-6 months,
  more than 6 months).
         These questions were used to create a series of round-specific pregnancy variables:
           PREGRD1: Whether the woman (aged 15-45) was pregnant at any time during
          Round 1
           PREGRD2:  Whether the woman (aged 15-45) was pregnant at any time during
          Round 2
           PREGRD3: Whether the woman (aged 15-45) was pregnant at any time during
          Round 3
           NOWPREG1: Whether the woman was pregnant at the time of the Round 1
          interview
           NOWPREG2: Whether the woman was pregnant at the time of the Round 2
          interview
           NOWPREG3: Whether the woman was pregnant at the time of the Round 3
          interview
           LIVEBIR1: Whether the woman had a live birth during Round 1
           LIVEBIR2: Whether the woman had a live birth during Round 2
           LIVEBIR3: Whether the woman had a live birth during Round 3
         LIVEBIR1 was set to -1 for women who were currently pregnant in Round 1, had only a single
          pregnancy during Round 1,  but had not yet given birth during Round 1.  Similar conventions were
          applied for LIVEBIR2 and LIVEBIR3.
         Three additional variables were derived that summarize each eligible woman's pregnancy
          experience.  NUMPRG13 is a count of the number of times each woman was pregnant during
          Rounds 1 through 3.  Males and females outside the 15-45 age range were coded as not applicable
          (-1).  NUMPRG13 does not correspond exactly to calendar year 1996, as some pregnancies
          reported in Round 3 could have occurred in 1997.
         PREG96 indicates whether a woman aged 15-45 had been pregnant at any time in 1996.  PREG96
          equals "yes" (1) if PREGRD1 equals "yes" (1) or PREGRD2 equals "yes" (1).  If PREGRD1,
          PREGRD2, and PREGRD3 all were "no" (2), then PREG96 = "no" (2).
         If a woman's only pregnancy occurred in Round 3 (PREGRD1 = 2, PREGRD2 = 2, and
          PREGRD3 = 1), then further steps were taken to ascertain if the pregnancy had been in effect in
          calendar year 1996.  If a woman was still pregnant at the time of the Round 3 interview, then
          information on how long she had been pregnant was used to determine if the pregnancy had been
          in effect by December 31, 1996.  If a women was no longer pregnant and the pregnancy had ended
          in a live birth, then the newborn's birthrate was used to determine if the pregnancy had been in
          effect by December 31, 1996.  If a woman was no longer pregnant and the pregnancy had not
          ended in a live birth (due, for example, to miscarriage or stillbirth), the duration of pregnancy, and
          therefore whether the pregnancy had been in effect in 1996, could not be ascertained.  In such
          situations, PREG96 = -9.  Similarly, if pregnancy duration information was unavailable for women
          who were still pregnant at the time of the Round 3 interview, then PREG96 = -9.
         BIRTH96 reports whether a woman aged 15-45 had given birth to a live infant in 1996.  If either
          LIVEBIR1 or LIVEBIR2 were "yes" (1), then BIRTH96 was "yes" (1).  If LIVEBIR1, LIVEBIR2,
          and LIVEBIR3 were all "no" (2), then BIRTH96 was "no" (2).  If a woman had a live birth only n
          Round 3, then the newborn's birthrate was examined; if it occurred in 1996, then BIRTH96 is
  "yes" (1).
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        3.7	Disability Days Indicator  Variables (DDNOWRK1-OTHNMDD3)
         The disability days section of the core interview contains questions about time lost from work or
          school and days spent in bed  because of a physical illness, injury, or mental or emotional problem.
          Data were collected on each individual in the household.  These questions were repeated in each
          round of interviews; this file contains data from Rounds 1, 2, and 3 of the MEPS panel initiated in
          1996.    The number at the end of the variable name (1, 2 or 3) identifies the Round in which the
          information was collected.
         The reference period for these questions is the time period between the beginning of the survey (for
          Round 1) or the previous interview date (for Rounds 2 and 3) and the current interview date.
         In order to establish the length of a round, analysts are referred to the variables that indicate the
          beginning date and ending date of each Round (BEGREFD, BEGREFM, BEGREFY, ENDREFD,
          ENDREFM, ENDREFY).  Analysts should be aware that Round 3 was conducted in 1996 and in
          1997.  Some data from Round 3 thus pertain to 1997.  The number of disability days in Round 3
          that occurred in each calendar year was not ascertained. If analysts want to create an indicator of
          disability days for the period of January 1, 1996 to December 31, 1996, some adjustment must be
          made to the Round 3 data.  Analysts who want to estimate disability days for calendar 1996 will
          need to develop an algorithm for deciding what portion of reported disability days occurred in 1996
          and what portion occurred in 1997.
         The variables DDNOWRK1, DDNOWRK2 and DDNOWRK3 represent the number of times the
          respondent lost a half day or more from work because of illness, injury or mental or emotional
          problems during Rounds 1, 2, and 3, respectively. A response of "no work days lost" was coded
          zero; if the respondent did not work, these variables were coded -1 (inapplicable), and for some
          analyses these values may have to be recoded to zero.  Respondents who were less than 16 years
          old were not asked about lost work days, and these variables are coded -1 (inapplicable) for them.
         WRKINBD1, WRKINBD2 and WRKINBD3 represent the number of work-loss days during each
          round in which the respondent spent at least half of the day in bed. These questions were asked
          only of persons aged 16 and over. Persons aged 15 or younger received a code of -1 (inapplicable). 
          If a respondent answered the preceding work-loss question with "zero days" or "does not work",
          then the corresponding WRKINBD question was coded as -1 (inapplicable).
         DDNSCHL1, DDNSCHL2 and DDNSCHL3 indicate the number of times that a respondent
          missed a half-day or more of school during Rounds 1, 2, or 3, respectively.  These questions were
          asked of persons aged 3 to 22; respondents aged less than 3 or older than 22 did not receive these
          questions and are coded as -1 on these variables.  A code of -1 also indicates that the person does
          not attend school.
         SCLINBD1, SCLINBD2 and SCLINBD3 represent the number of school-loss days during each
          round in which the individual spent at least a half day in bed.  Respondents aged less than 3 or
          older than 22 did not receive these questions and are coded as -1 on these variables.  If a
          respondent answered the preceding school-loss question with "zero days" or "does not work", then
          the corresponding SCLINBD question is coded as -1 (inapplicable).
         DDBEDYS1, DDBEDYS2 and DDBEDYS3 represent additional days, other than school or work
          days, in which the respondent spent at least half a day in bed, because of a physical illness or injury
          or a mental or emotional problem.  These are the only indicators of disability days for persons who
          do not work or go to school.  This question was not asked of children less than one year of age
          (coded -1).
         A final set of variables indicate if an individual took a half-day or more off from work to care for
          the health problems of another individual in the family. OTHRDYS1, OTHRDYS2, and
          OTHRDYS3 indicate if a person missed work because of someone else's illness, injury or health
          care needs, for example to take care of a sick child or relative. These variables each have three
          possible answers: yes  -- missed work to care for another (coded 1); no   did not miss work to care
          for another (coded 2); or the person does not work (coded 2), based on responses to the
          DDNOWRK variable for the same Round.  Respondents younger than 16 were not asked these
          questions and are coded as -1.
         OTHNMDD1, OTHNMDD2 and OTHNMDD3 indicate the number of days during each round in
          which work was lost because of another's health problem.  Respondents younger than 16,  those
          who do not work, and those who answer "no" to OTHRDYS are skipped out of OTHNMDD and
          receive codes of -1.
         For respondents with positive weights, a minimal amount of editing was done on these variables to
          preserve the skip patterns. No imputation was done for those with missing data.
         Medical conditions associated with the disability days reported for each round are identifiable by
          three flag variables on the condition file.  MISSWORK identifies conditions associated with
          missed work days.  MISSSCHL identifies conditions associated with missed school days and
          INBEDFLG indicates conditions associated with bed days. It is not possible to identify the number
          of disability days associated with a specific condition, unless that is the only condition a
          respondent reports as a reason for work-loss, school-loss, or bed days.
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        3.8	Access to Care Variables (ACCELIG2-OTHRPRO2)
         The variables ACCELIG2 through OTHRPRO2 describe data from the Access to Care section of
          the HC questionnaire, which was administered in Round 2 of the MEPS HC.  This supplement
          serves a number of purposes in the MEPS HC by gathering information on three main topic areas: 
          whether each family member has a usual source of health care, the characteristics of usual source
          of health care providers for the family, and barriers the family has faced in obtaining needed health
          care.  The variable ACCELIG2 indicates whether persons were eligible to receive the Round 2
          Access to Care questions.  Persons with ACCELIG2=2 should be excluded from estimates made
          with the Round 2 Access to Care data.  A Round 2 person and family weight (WGTSP2T and
          WGTRU2T)  is provided for use with Round 2 health status variables (which can be identified by
          Rd 2 designation in the variable label) and should be used to account for item
         non-response when these variables are used as dependent variables in an analysis.
          Family members' usual source of health care. For each individual family
          member, MEPS HC ascertains whether there is a particular doctor's office, clinic,
          health center, or other place that the individual usually goes to if he/she is sick or
          needs advice about his/her health (HAVEUSC2).  For those family members who
          do not have a usual source of health care, MEPS HC ascertains the reason(s) why
          (YNOUSC2 through OTHREA42).  If any family members changed their usual
          source of health care during the 12 months prior to the Round 2 interview, MEPS
          HC gathers information on the reason why this change was made (CHNGUSC2
          through YNOMORE2).
          Characteristics of usual source of health care providers for the family. For each
          unique usual source of care provider for a given family, MEPS HC asks for
          information on the following characteristics of the usual source of care provider:
           is the provider a medical doctor or some other type of
          medical provider (followed by questions which ask either the
          provider's medical specialty or the type of non-physician
          provider) (TYPEPER2), and is the provider hospital-based
          (TYPEPLC2 and LOCATIO2);
           is the provider the person or place family members would go
          to for new health problems, preventive health care, and
          referrals to other health professionals (MINORPR2 through
          REFFRLS2);
           does the provider have office hours nights and weekends,
          characteristics of the provider related to appointments and
          waiting time, ease of contacting a medical person at the
          provider's office by telephone (OFFHOUR2 through
          PHONEDI2);
           a number of quality-related characteristics of the provider,
          including whether the provider generally listens to family
          members, asks about prescription medications other doctors
          may give them, and family members' confidence in and
          satisfaction with the care received from the provider
          (PRLISTE2 through USCQUAL2).
          Family barriers. Finally, the Access to Care supplement gathers information on
          barriers to health care for the family.  This includes one question that asks if any
          family members have recently gone without needed health care because the family
          needed money to buy food, clothing, or pay for housing (NOCARE2).  In addition,
          the respondent is asked to rate his/her satisfaction with the ability of family
          members to obtain health care if needed (HCNEEDS2).  A series of two questions is
          asked to directly assess whether any family members experienced difficulty in
          obtaining any type of health care, delayed obtaining care, or did not receive health
          care they thought they needed due to any of the following reasons (OBTAINH2
          through OTHRPRO2):
           Financial/Insurance Problems, including couldn't afford care;
          insurance company wouldn't approve, cover, or pay for care;
          pre-existing condition; insurance required a referral, but
          couldn't get one; doctor refused to accept family's insurance
          plan;
           Transportation Problems, including medical care was too far
          away; can't drive or don't have car/no public transportation
          available; too expensive to get there;
           Communication Problems, including hearing impairment or
          loss; different language;
           Physical Problems, including hard to get into building; hard
          to get around inside building; no appropriate equipment in
          office;
           Other Problems, including couldn't get time off work; didn't
          know where to go to get care; was refused services; couldn't
          get child care; didn't have time or took too long.
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        Editing of the Access to Care Variables
         Editing of these File 2 variables consisted primarily of logical editing for consistency with skip
          patterns.  Other editing included the construction of new variables describing the USC provider,
          and recoding several  "other specify" text items into existing or new categorical values, which are
          described below.
         Not all variables or categories that appear in the Access to Care section are included on File 2, as
          some small cell sizes have been suppressed to maintain respondent confidentiality.  This affects the
          following questions:
           AC11: Categories 1 and 2 were combined and appear in the variable TYPEPER2 as
          8 NURSE/NURSE PRACTITIONER
           AC23: Categories 2 and 4 were combined with 91 OTHER REASON
           AC26: Categories 9, 11 and 12 were combined with 91 OTHER
         Constructed Variables Describing the Usual Source of Care Provider
         The variables PROVTYX2, TYPEPLC2, TYPEPER2 and LOCATIO2 provide information on the
          type and location of the usual source of care provider.  These variables were constructed as
          follows, using one or more questionnaire items which are not included on File 2:
           PROVTYX2 was constructed from items in the Provider Roster Section (available
          as a downloadable file on the MEPS Home Page), and has the following possible
          values: 
        
        
		  1 FACILITY 
          2 PERSON 
          3 PERSON IN FACILITY PROVIDER 
		 
          Question PV01 asks whether the provider is a person or a facility.  For providers
          designated as a person, the responses to item PV05 (which indicates if the provider
          is part of a group practice or HMO) and items PV03/  PV10 (which indicate the
          provider's address), were used to determine if the provider is a "person in facility"
          provider (i.e., a person for whom both person and facility characteristics are known,
          such as "Dr. X at Y Medical Associates") .
           TYPEPER2 was constructed from responses to items AC10, AC11, AC11OV,
          AC12 and AC12OV in the Access to Care Section and describes the type of medical
          provider for providers indicated as person or person in facility providers (records
          with PROVTYX2 = 1 have a value of -1 for TYPEPER2). TYPEPER2 has the
          following possible values: 
		
        
		  1 MD- GENERAL/FAMILY PRACTICE 
          2 MD- INTERNAL MEDICINE 
          3 MD - PEDIATRICS 
          4 MD - OB/GYN 
          5 MD-SURGERY 
          6 MD - OTHER 
          7 CHIROPRACTOR 
          8 NURSE/NURSE PRACTITIONER 
          9 PHYSICIAN'S ASSISTANT 
          10 OTHER NON-MD PROVIDER 
          11 UNKNOWN 
		 
        Note that the value 6 MD-OTHER includes doctors of osteopathy, as well as a small number of
          medical doctors whose specialty is unknown. 
          TYPEPLC2 was constructed from responses to Access to Care items AC06 and
          AC07 and describes the type of place corresponding to the usual source of care
          provider with the following values: 
		
        
		  1 HOSPITAL CLINIC OR OUTPATIENT DEPARTMENT 
          2 PRIVATE OFFICE IN HOSPITAL 
          3 HOSPITAL EMERGENCY ROOM 
          4 NON-HOSPITAL PLACE 
		 
          TYPEPLC2 was only constructed for cases with provider type indicated as facility
          or person in facility provider (records with PROVTYX2=2 have a value of -1 for
          TYPEPLC2). 
          LOCATIO2 was constructed from the variables PROVTYX2 and TYPEPLC2, and
          describes the location of the provider as either office based or hospital based, and if
          hospital based, as either emergency room or non-emergency room.  LOCATIO2 has
          the following values: 
		
        
		  1 OFFICE 
          2 HOSPITAL, NOT EMERGENCY ROOM 
          3 HOSPITAL EMERGENCY ROOM 
		 
          Note that all cases with PROVTYX2=2 PERSON have LOCATIO2 = 1 OFFICE.
         These 4 variables in combination describe the usual source of care provider.  For example, a group
          practice or clinic with no particular person named is coded as: 
        PROVTYX2 = 1 FACILITY, LOCATIO2 = 1 OFFICE and TYPEPER2 = -1 INAPPLICABLE. 
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        Re-coding of Additional Other Specify Text Items 
        For Access to Care items AC03, AC04, AC08, AC09, AC21 and AC23, the other specify text
          responses were reviewed and coded as an existing or new value for the related categorical variable
          (for AC03, AC08, AC21 and AC23), or coded as an existing or new "yes/no" variable (for items
          AC04 and AC09).  The following are the new codes or variables which were created from these
          other specify text responses. 
		
          for item AC03 - this new value was constructed for the variable YNOUSC2: 
		  
            10 OTHER INSURANCE RELATED REASON 
		   
		 
		
          for item AC04 - the new variable OTHINSR2 was constructed for other insurance-related reasons 
		 
		
          for item AC08 - this new value was constructed for the variable YGOTOUS2: 
		  
            10 INSURANCE RELATED REASON 
		   
		 
        
		  for item AC09 - the new variable INSREAS2 was constructed for insurance-related reasons 
		 
		
          for item AC21 - these new values were constructed for the variable YCHNGUS2: 
          
		  
		    8 COST-RELATED REASON 
            9 OTHER INSURANCE-RELATED REASON 
            10 JOB RELATED REASON 
            11 NEW DOCTOR WAS REFERRED OR RECOMMENDED 
            12 OTHER COMPLAINTS ABOUT OLD DOCTOR 
            13 TRANSPORTATION REASON 
		   
		 
		
          for item AC23 - these new values were constructed for the variable YNOMORE2: 
		  
          
		    8 COST-RELATED REASON 
            9 SELDOM OR NEVER SICK/NO NEED FOR DOCTOR 
            10 OTHER INSURANCE-RELATED REASON 
           
		 
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        3.9 	Health Status (RTEHLTH1-MAMOGRM3)
         Health status variables in this date release can be classified into several conceptually distinct sets:
           1)			Perceived health status and ADL and IADL limitations
           2)			Functional limitations and activity limitations
           3)	Vision problems
           4)	Hearing problems
           5)			Children's health status
           6)	Complementary/Alternative Care
           7) 	Preventive Care
         This data release incorporates information from calendar year 1996 only.  Because the data in this
          PUF are only for calendar year 1996, health status data obtained in Round 3 of MEPS (and
          subsequent Rounds) are not included, as Round 3 occurred in 1997.   The exception is the
          complementary/alternative care variables, which, although measured in Round 3, asked about use
          and expenditures incurred in 1996.
         Variables in the first set were measured in Round 1 and again in Round 2.  Variables in set 2 were
          measured in Round 1 only.  Variables in sets 3, 4, and 5 were measured in Round 2 only. 
          Variables in sets 6 and 7 came from Round 3 only.    The final digit in each variable name indicates
          in which Round the variable was measured.  A Round 2 person and family weight (WGTSP2T and
          WGTRU2T)  is provided for use with Round 2 health status variables (which can be identified by
          Rd 2 designation in the variable label) and should be used to account for item
         non-response when these variables are used as dependent variables in an analysis.
         In general, health status variables involved the construction of person-level variables based on
          information collected in the Condition Enumeration, Health Status and Alternative/Preventive Care
          sections of the questionnaire.  Many Health Status questions were initially asked at the family level
          to ascertain if anyone in the household had a particular problem or limitation.  These were
          followed up with questions to determine which household member had each problem or limitation. 
          All information ascertained at the family level has been brought to the person level for this file. 
          Logical edits were performed in constructing the person-level variables to assure that family-level
          and person-level values were consistent.  Particular attention was given to cases where missing
          values were reported at the family level, to ensure that appropriate information was carried to the
          person level.
         Inapplicable cases occurred when a question was never asked because of a skip pattern in the
          survey (e.g., individuals who were 13 years of age or older were not asked some follow-up
          verification questions; individuals older than 17 were not asked questions pertaining to children's
          health status).  Inapplicable cases are coded as -1.  In addition, for all variables except those in the
          alternative care set, deceased persons were coded as inapplicable and received a code of -1.
         Persons who were not in scope for a particular Round of the survey were assigned the missing
          value code of -3.
         Each of the sets of variables listed are described below.
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        Perceived Health Status and ADL and IADL Limitations 
         Perceived Health Status. Perceived health status (RTEHLTH1 and RTEHLTH2) and mental health
          status (MNTHLTH1 and MNTHLTH2) were collected in the Condition Enumeration section. 
          These questions (CE01 and CE02) asked the respondent to rate each person in the family according
          to the following categories:  excellent, very good, good, fair, and poor.  No editing was done to
          these variables.  The corresponding dichotomous variables RTEPROX1, RTEPROX2,
          MNTPROX1, and MNTPROX2 each indicate whether the ratings of physical and mental health in
          Round 1 and Round 2 , respectively, were provided by oneself or by someone else.
         IADL Help. The Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) Help or Supervision variables
          (IADLHLP1 from Round 1 and IADLHLP2 from Round 2) were each constructed from a series of
          three questions administered in the Health Status section of the interview.  The initial question
          (HE01) determined if anyone in the family received help or supervision with  IADLs such as using
          the telephone, paying bills, taking medications, preparing light meals, doing laundry, or going
          shopping.  If the response was "yes," a follow-up question (HE02) was asked to determine which
          household member received this help or supervision.  For persons under age 13, a final verification
          question (HE03) was asked to confirm that the IADL help or supervision was the result of an
          impairment or physical or mental health problem.  If the response to the final verification question
          was "no," IADLHLP1 and IADLHLP2 were coded "no" for persons under the age of 13.
         If no one in the family was identified as receiving help or supervision with IADLs, all members of
          the family were coded as receiving no IADL help or supervision.  In cases where the response to
          the family-level question was "don't know" (-7), "refused" (-8), or not ascertained (-9), all persons
          were coded according to the family-level response.  In cases where the response to the family-level
          question (HE01) was "yes" but no specific individuals were identified in the follow-up question as
          having IADL difficulties, all persons were coded as "don't know" (-8).
         ADL Help. The Activities of Daily Living (ADL) Help or Supervision variable (ADLHELP1 in
          Round 1 and ADLHELP2 in Round 2) were each constructed in the same manner as IADLHLP1
          and IADLHLP2, but using questions HE04-HE06.  Coding conventions for missing data were the
          same as for the IADL variables.
         Functional and Activity Limitations
         Functional Limitations.  A series of questions pertained to functional limitations, defined as
          difficulty in performing certain specific physical actions.  WALKLIM1 was the filter question.  It
          was derived from a question (HE09) that was asked at the family level: "Does anyone in the family
          have difficulties walking, climbing stairs, grasping objects, reaching overhead, lifting, bending or
          stooping, or standing for long periods of time?"  If the answer was "no", then all family members
          were coded as "no" (2) on WALKLIM1.  If the answer was "yes," then the specific persons who
          had any of these difficulties were identified and coded as "yes" (1) on WALKLIM1, and remaining
          family members were coded as "no".  If the response to the family-level question was "don't
          know" (-8), "refused" (-7), "missing" (-9), or "inapplicable" (-1), then the corresponding missing
          value code was applied to each family member's value for WALKLIM1.  If the answer to HE09
          was "yes," but no specific individual was named as experiencing such difficulties, then each
          family member was assigned -8 for WALKLIM1.  Deceased respondents were assigned a -1 code
          ("inapplicable") for WALKLIM1.
         If any family member was coded "yes" to WALKLIM1, a subsequent series of questions was
          administered.   The series of questions for which WALKLIM1 served as a filter was as follows:
           LIFTDIF1 - difficulty lifting 10 pounds
           STEPDIF1 - difficulty walking up 10 steps
           WALKDIF1 - difficulty walking 3 blocks
           MILEDIF1 - difficulty walking a mile
           STANDIF1 - difficulty standing 20 minutes
           BENDDIF1 - difficulty bending or stooping
           RECHDIF1 - difficulty reaching over head
           FINGRDF1 - difficulty using fingers to grasp
         The series of questions was asked separately for each person who was coded "yes" to
          WALKLIM1.  The series of questions was not asked for other individual family members for
          whom WALKLIM1 was "no."  In addition, this series was not asked about family members who
          were less than 13 years of age, regardless of their status on WALKLIM1.  Finally, these questions
          were not asked about deceased family members.  In such cases (i.e., WALKLIM1 = 2, or age < 13,
          or PSTATUS1 = 31),  each question in the series was coded as "inapplicable" (-1).  Finally, if
          responses to WALKLIM1 were "refused" (-7), "don't know" (-8), "not ascertained" (-9), or
          otherwise inapplicable (-1), then each question in this series was coded as "inapplicable" (-1).
         Analysts should note that, for WALKLIM1, there was no minimum age criterion that was used to
          determine a skip pattern, whereas, for the subsequent series of questions, persons less than 13 years
          old were skipped and coded as "inapplicable".  Therefore, it is possible for someone aged 12 or
          less to have a code of 1 ("yes") on WALKLIM1, and also to have codes of "inapplicable" on the
          subsequent series of questions.
         Use of Assistive Technology and Social/Recreational Limitations .  The variables indicating use of
          assistive technology (AIDHELP1, from question HE07) and social/recreational limitations
          (SOCLIMT1, from question HE22) were collected initially at the family level.  If there was a "yes"
          response to the family-level question, a second question identified which specific individual(s) the
  "yes" response pertained to.  Each individual identified as having the difficulty was coded "yes"
          on the appropriate variable; all remaining family members were coded "no."  If the family-level
          response was "don't know" (-7), "refused" (-8), or not ascertained (-9), all persons were coded with
          the family-level response.  In cases where the family-level response was "yes" but no specific
          individual was identified as having difficulty, all family members were coded as "don't know" (-8).
         Work, Housework, and School Limitations .  The variable indicating any limitation in work,
          housework, or school (ACTLIM1) was constructed using questions HE19-HE20.  Specifically,
          information was collected initially at the family level.  If there was a "yes" response to the family-level question (HE19), a second question (HE20) identified which specific individual(s)   the
  "yes" response pertained to.  Each individual identified as having a limitation was coded "yes" on
          ACTLIM1; all remaining family members were coded "no."  If the family-level response was
  "don't know"(-7), "refused" (-8), or not ascertained (-9), all persons were coded with the family-level response.  In cases where the family-level response was "yes" but no specific individual was
          identified as having difficulty, all family members were coded as "don't know" (-8).   Persons less
          than five years old were coded as inapplicable (-1) on ACTLIM1.
         If ACTLIM1 was "yes" and the person was 5 years of age or older, a follow-up question (HE20A)
          was asked to identify the specific limitation or limitations for each person.  These included
          working at a job (WRKLIM1), doing housework (HSELIM1), or going to school (SCHLIMT1). 
          Respondents could answer "yes" to each activity; one person could thus report limitation in
          multiple activities.  WRKLIM1, HSELIM1, and SCHLIM1 have values of  "yes" or "no" only if
          ACTLIM1 was "yes;" each variable was coded as inapplicable (-1) if ACTLIM1 was "no,"
  "refused" (-7), or not ascertained (-9).  When ACTLIM13 was "don't know" (-8), these variables
          were all coded as "don't know" (-8).  If a person was under 5 years old or was deceased,
          WRKLIM1, HSELIM1, and SCHLIMT1 were each coded as "inapplicable" (-1).
         A second question (UNABLE1) asked if the person was completely unable to work at a job, do
          housework, or go to school.  This question was asked only of the same set of respondents who
          provided data on WRKLIM1, HSELIM1, and SCHLIMT1 .  Therefore, those respondents who
          were coded "no" on ACTLIM1, or were under 5 years of age, or were deceased, were coded as
  "inapplicable" (-1) on UNABLE1.  UNABLE1 was asked once for whichever set of WRKLIM1,
          HSELIM1, and SCHLIMT1 the respondent had limitations; if a respondent was limited in more
          than one of these three activities, UNABLE1 did not specify if the respondent was completely
          unable to perform all of them, or only some of them.
         Cognitive Limitations .  The variable (COGLIMT1) was collected at the family level as a three-part
          question (HE24-01 to HE24-03) indicating if any of the adults in the family (1) experience
          confusion or memory loss, (2) have problems making decisions, or (3) require supervision for their
          own safety.  If a "yes" response was obtained to any item, the persons affected were identified in
          HE25 and COGLIMT1 was coded as "yes."  Remaining family members not identified were coded
          as "no" for COGLIMT1.
         If responses to HE24-01 though HE24-03 were all "no," or if two of three were "no" and the
          remaining was "don't know," "refused," or not ascertained, all family members were coded as "no." 
          If responses to the three questions were combinations of "don't know," "refused," and missing, all
          persons were coded as "don't know" (-8).  If the response to any of the three questions was "yes"
          but no individual was identified in HE25, all persons were coded as "don't know" (-8).
         COGLIMT1 reflects whether any of the three component questions is "yes."  Respondents with
         one, two, or three specific cognitive limitations cannot be distinguished.  In addition, because the
          question asked specifically about "adult" family members, all persons less than 18 years of age are
          coded as "inapplicable" (-1) on this question.
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        Vision Problems
         A series of questions (HE26 to HE32) provides information on visual impairment.  These
          questions were asked of all household members, regardless of age.  Deceased respondents were
          coded as not applicable (-1).
         WEARGLAS2 indicates whether a person wears eyeglasses or contact lenses.  This variable was
          based on two questions, HE26 and HE27.  The initial question (HE26) determined if anyone in the
          family wore eyeglasses or contact lenses.  If the response was "yes," a follow-up question (HE27)
          was asked to determine which household member(s)  wore eyeglasses or contact lenses.    If the
          family-level response was "don't know"(-8), "refused" (-7), or not ascertained (-9), all persons were
          coded with the family-level response.  In cases where the family-level response was "yes" but no
          specific individual was identified as wearing glasses or contact lenses, all family members were
          coded as "don't know" (-8).
         SEEDIF2 indicates whether anyone in the family had difficulty seeing (with glasses or contacts, if
          used).  This variable was based on two questions, HE28 and HE29.  The initial question (HE28)
          determined if anyone in the family had difficulty seeing.  If the response was "yes," a follow-up
          question (HE29) was asked to determine which household member(s) had a visual impairment.    If
          the family-level response was "don't know"(-8), "refused" (-7), or not ascertained (-9), all persons
          were coded with the family-level response.  In cases where the family-level response was "yes" but
          no specific individual was identified as having difficulty seeing, all family members were coded as
  "don't know" (-8).
         Three subsequent questions were asked only for individuals who had difficulty seeing (i.e.,
          SEEDIF2 = 1).  Persons with no visual impairment were coded as not applicable (-1) for these
          questions, as were persons with "don't know" (-8), "refused" (-7), or not ascertained (-9)
          responses to SEEDIF2.  BLIND2 determined if a person with difficulty seeing was blind.  For
          persons who were not blind (BLIND2 = 2), READNEW2 asked whether the person could see well
          enough to read ordinary newspaper print (with glasses or contacts, if used); persons who were
          blind were not asked this question and were coded as not applicable (-1).  For persons who could
          not read ordinary newspaper print (READNEW2 = 2), RECPEOP2 asked if the person could see
          well enough to recognize familiar people standing two or three feet away.  Persons who were blind
          or who could read newsprint were not asked this question and were coded as not applicable (-1).
         VISION2 summarizes the pattern of responses to the set of visual impairment questions. Codes for
          VISION2 are as follows:
           1 - No difficulty seeing (SEEDIF2 = 2)
           2 - Some difficulty seeing, can read newsprint (SEEDIF2 = 1 and READNEW2 = 1)
           3 - Some difficulty seeing, can not read newsprint, can recognize familiar people
           (SEEDIF2 = 1 and READNEW2 = 2 and RECPEOP2 = 1)
           4 - Some difficulty seeing, can not read newsprint, can not recognize familiar people
           (SEEDIF2 =1 and  READNEW2 = 2 and RECPEOP2 = 2)
           5 - Blind (SEEDIF2 = 1 and BLIND2 = 1).
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        Hearing Problems
         A series of questions (HE33 to HE39) provides information on hearing impairment.  These
          questions were asked of all household members, regardless of age.  Deceased respondents were
          coded as not applicable (-1).
         HEARAID2 indicates whether a person wears a hearing aid.  This variable was based on two
          questions, HE33 and HE34.  The initial question (HE33) determined if anyone in the family wore a
          hearing aid.  If the response was "yes," a follow-up question (HE34) was asked to determine which
          household member(s)  wore a hearing aid.    If the family-level response was "don't know"(-8),
  "refused" (-7), or not ascertained (-9), all persons were coded with the family-level response.  In
          cases where the family-level response was "yes" but no specific individual was identified as
          wearing a hearing aid, all family members were coded as "don't know" (-8).
         HEARDIF2 indicates whether anyone in the family had difficulty hearing (with a hearing aid, if
          used).  This variable is based on two questions, HE35 and HE36.  The initial question (HE35)
          determined if anyone in the family had difficulty hearing.  If the response was "yes," a follow-up
          question (HE36) was asked to determine which household member had an aural impairment.    If
          the family-level response was "don't know"(-8), "refused" (-7), or not ascertained (-9), all persons
          were coded with the family-level response.  In cases where the family-level response was "yes" but
          no specific individual was identified as using a hearing aid, all family members were coded as
  "don't know" (-8).
         Three subsequent questions were asked only for individuals who had difficulty hearing (i.e.,
         HEARDIF2 = 1).  Persons with no hearing impairment were coded as not applicable (-1) for these
          questions, as were persons with "don't know" (-8), "refused" (-7), or not ascertained (-9)
          responses to HEARDIF2.  DEAF2 determined if a person with difficulty hearing was deaf.  For
          persons who were not deaf (DEAF2 = 2), HEARMOS2 asked whether the person could hear well
          enough to hear most of the things people say (with a hearing aid, if used); persons who were deaf
          were not asked this question and were coded as not applicable (-1).  For persons who could not
          hear most things people say (HEARMOS2 = 2), HEARSOM2 asked if the person could hear well
          enough to hear some of the thing that people say.  Persons who were deaf or who could hear most
          conversation were not asked this question and were coded as not applicable (-1).
         HEARING2 summarizes the pattern of responses to the set of hearing impairment questions.
          Codes for HEARING2 are as follows:
           1	-	No difficulty hearing (HEARDIF2 = 2)
           2 	- 	Some difficulty hearing, can hear most things people say (HEARDIF2 = 1 and
          HEARMOS2 = 1)
           3 	- 	Some difficulty hearing, can not hear most things people say, can hear some things
          people say (HEARDIF2 = 1 and HEARMOS2 = 2 and HEARSOM2 = 1)
           4 	-	Some difficulty hearing, can not hear most things people say, can not hear some
          things people say, but not deaf (HEARDIF2 =1 and HEARMOS2 = 2 and
          HEARSOM2 = 2)
           5 	-	Deaf (HEARDIF2 = 1 and DEAF2 = 1).
         Any Limitation, Rounds 1 or 2
         ANYLIM12 summarizes whether the respondent has any ADL, IADL, activity, functional or
          sensory limitations in Rounds 1 or 2.  ANYLIM12 was built upon component variables
          IADLHLP1, IADLHLP2, ADLHELP1, ADLHELP2, WALKLIM1, ACTLIM1, SEEDIF2 and
          HEARDIF2.  (The latter two variables, discussed above, indicate any visual or hearing impairment,
          respectively).   If any of these components was coded "yes", then ANYLIM12 was coded "yes" (1). 
          If all components equaled "no", the ANYLIM12 equaled "no" (2).  If all the components had
          missing value codes (i.e., -7, -8, -9 or -1), then ANYLIM12 was coded as not ascertained (-9).  If
          some components were "no" and others had missing value codes, ANYLIM12 was coded as not
          ascertained (-9).  The exception to this latter rule was for children less than five years old, who did
          not receive the ACTLIM1 question and thus ACTLIM1 equaled -1; for these respondents, if all
          other components were "no", then ANYLIM12 was coded as "no" (2).
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        Children's Health Status
         Play Limitations (Children age 4 and under).   The variable LIMACT2, indicating limitation in
          activities for children ages  0 through 4, was constructed using questions HE40 and HE41. The
          initial question (HE40) determined if any child aged 4 or under in the family was limited in any
          way, including play activity, because of an impairment or physical or mental health problem.  If the
          response was "yes," the follow-up question determined which child should be coded "yes."  If
          there were other children aged 4 or under in the family who were not identified as having
          limitations, they were coded "no." If the answer to LIMACT2 was "no," all children aged four or
          under in the family were coded "no."  If there was an indication that a child had a limitation, but
          no child was identified, all children within the age category were coded "don't know" (-8).  In
          cases where the response to the family-level question was "don't know" (-8),  "refused" (-7),  or
          not ascertained (-9), all children ages 4 and under were coded according to the family level
          response. If a person's age (as measured by the Round 2 age variable) was greater than 4,
          LIMACT2 was coded -1.
         Other variables indicate if children aged 0 to 4 were limited in the kind or amount of play activities
          (PLAYLIM2), were unable to play (CANTPLA2), or participated in special programs or early
          interventions (SPECPRO2).  If a person aged 4 or under had no activity limitations (i.e., LIMACT2
          = 2), then   PLAYLIM2, CANTPLA2, and SPECPRO2 were each coded -1. If a person's age (as
          measured by the Round 2 age variable) was greater than 4, PLAYLIM2, CANTPLA2, and
          SPECPRO2 were coded -1.
         Immunization Variables (Children ages 0 through 6). Immunization information was collected at
          the person level for children ages 0 through 6 by questions HE45 to HE49A.  If age of child, as
          measured by the Round 2 age variable, was greater than 6, all immunization variables were coded -1.  For questions about diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus (DTP) or polio immunization
          (DTPSHOT2, POLIOSH2) there were follow up questions which asked about the frequency of the
          immunization shots or drops.  If the answer to DTPSHOT2 or POLIOSH2 was "no," "don't
          know," or "refused," then the respective follow up variables NUMDTP2 and NUMPOLI2 were
          coded -1.  For questions about immunization for measles/mumps/rubella (MMRSHOT2) and for
          hepatitis (HEPBSHT2), there were no follow-up questions.
         Behavioral Problem Variables (Children ages 5 to 17) The series of questions HE50_01 to
          HE50_13 inquired about possible child behavioral problems.  Variables in this set include:
           MOMPRO2: problem getting along with mother
           DADPRO2: problem getting along with father
           UNHAP2: feeling unhappy or sad
           SCHLBEH2: problem with behavior at school
           HAVEFUN2: problem having fun
           ADULPRO2: problem getting along with adults
           NERVAFR2: problem with child feeling nervous or afraid
           SIBPRO2: problem getting along with siblings
           KIDPRO2: problem getting along with other kids
           SPORPRO2: problem engaging in sports or hobbies
           SCHLPRO2: problem doing schoolwork
           HOMEBEH2: problem with behavior at home
           TROUBLE2: problem staying out of trouble.
         If the age of the child (as measured by the Round 2 age variable) was less than 5 or greater than 17,
          the variables MOMPROB2 to TROUBLE2 were coded -1.
         Certain questions in this series could be inapplicable for a specific child.  For example, if a child's
          mother was deceased, a question about how a child gets along with his/her mother is inapplicable. 
          Similarly, the question about problems getting along with siblings would be inapplicable for only
          children.  In such instances,  the relevant variable was coded 99 to indicate that it was inapplicable.
         Special Education and Special Services (Children ages 5-17). A series of questions asked about
          participation in special education programs or receipt of therapy or special services.  If the
          respondent was not in the age range of 5-17 years of age (as measured by the Round 2 age
          variable), or if the respondent was deceased, these questions were coded as inapplicable (-1).
         SPECSCH2 is based on question HE51, which asked whether the child had an impairment or a
          physical or mental health problem that limited school attendance or required a special school
          program.  This question served as a filter for subsequent questions.  If the response was "no" (2),
  "refused" (-7), or "don't know" (-8),  then SPECED2 through CANTSCH2 were coded as
          inapplicable (-1).
         If the response to SPECSCH2 was "yes" (1) then question HE52 (SPECED2) was asked. 
          SPECED2 asked whether the child was enrolled in any type of special education or received
          related services.  Possible responses to this question were "yes, enrolled in special education" (1),
  "yes, enrolled in related services," (2), "yes, both special education and special services," (3), 
  "no" (4), and "other" (91).
         If responses to SPECED2 were coded as 2 or 3, then respondents were presented with a list of
          other related services and asked to indicate which one(s) the child had received.  Respondents
          could indicate more than one type of service.  These questions constitute variables SPCHTHE2 to
          OTHSVC2.
           SPCHTHE2: Received speech therapy
           OCUPTHE2: Received occupational therapy
           VOCSVCS2: Received vocational services
           TUTOR2: Received tutoring
           READINT2: Uses a reader or interpreter
           PHYTHER2: Received physical therapy
           LIFSKIL2: Received life skills training
           PSYCNSL2: Received psychological counseling
           FAMCNS2: Received family counseling
           RECTHER2: Received recreational therapy
           OTHSVC2: Received other school services
           Responses to these questions were coded as inapplicable (-1) if the response to SPECED2 was 1
          (enrolled in special education only), or -7 (refused), or -8 (don't know).
         If the response to SPECSCH2 was "yes" (1) then question HE53 (CANTSCH2) was asked.  This
          question asked whether the child was limited in attendance or unable to attend school due to an
          impairment or a physical or mental health problem.  Responses of "limited in attendance" were
          coded 1, "unable to attend" as 2, and "neither" as 3.
         Question HE54 (LMOTACT2) was asked of all children ages 5-17.  This question ascertained
         whether the child was limited in any way in activities other than school because of an impairment
          or a physical or mental health problem.
         Children's Health Status: General Questions (ages 0 - 17)
         Several questions were asked about all children ages 0 through 17.  Respondents who were older
          than 17 or who were deceased were coded as not applicable (-1) for these variables.  Three
          questions asked for ratings of the child's health on a 4-point Likert scale, ranging from "definitely
          false" (1) to "definitely true" (4).  These questions were:
           HEALTHY2: Child resists illness.
           NTHLTHY2: Child seems to be less healthy than other children.
           GETSICK2: Child seems to catch diseases that are going around.
         In addition, information was provided on each child's height in feet (HIGHTFT2) and inches
          (HIGHTIN2), as well as each child's weight in pounds (WEIGHLB2) and in ounces
          (WEIGHOZ2).
         Finally, CHLDLIM2 was constructed to reflect each child's inability to perform age-appropriate
          social roles.  For children aged 0 to 4, this variable was based on responses to LIMACT2,
          PLAYLIM2 and CANTPLA2 ; for children aged 5-17, it was based on responses to SPECSCH2,
          CANTSCH2 and LMOTACT2.  If any one of these variables had a "yes" response (i.e., codes of 1
          for LIMACT2, PLAYLIM2, CANTPLA2, SPECSCH2, or LMOTACT2, or codes of 1 or 2 for
          CANTSCH2), then CHILDLIM2 was coded as "yes" (1).  If the relevant variables were all "no",
          then CHILDLIM2 was coded as "no" (2).  CHILDLIM2 was coded as "not ascertained" (-9) if the
          relevant variables were combinations of "refused" (-7), "don't know" (-8), or not ascertained (-9).
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        Complementary/Alternative Care
         Round 3 included a series of questions that obtained information on the extent to which
          respondents used complementary or alternative medicine, such as acupuncture, nutritional advice,
          massage therapy, herbal therapy, biofeedback, homeopathic treatment, spiritual healing, relaxation
          therapy, hypnosis, or traditional (e.g., Chinese, American Indian) medicine.  These questions all
          asked about use during calendar year 1996.  In contrast to other health status variables, these
          questions were asked about deceased respondents.
         Respondents were shown a card listing the above types of alternative medical treatments and asked
          (AP01) whether, during calendar year 1996, for health reasons, the person had consulted someone
          who provided these types of treatment.  If the response was "yes," the respondent was asked to
          specify which of the treatments on the list had been received.  Multiple types of service use by one
          person were possible.  Respondents could also specify that some other treatment, not explicitly
          included on the list, had been received.  This file contains a variable indicating that a respondent
          used a type of alternative treatment other than that specified on the list; the file does not contain
          any further information regarding the nature of this "other" alternative treatment.
         The list included the following types of alternative treatments:
           acupuncture (ACUPUN96)
           nutritional advice or lifestyle diets (NUTRIT96)
           massage therapy (MASSAG96)
           herbal remedies purchased (HERBAL96)
           bio-feedback training (BIOFDB96)
           training or practice of meditation, imagery, or relaxation techniques (MEDITA96)
           homeopathic treatment (HOMEOT96)
           spiritual healing or prayer (SPIRTU96)
           hypnosis (HYPNO96)
           traditional medicine, such as Chinese, Ayurvedic, American Indian, etc. (TRADIT96)
           other treatment (ALTOTH96)
         If a person was reported not to have used any alternative treatment during 1996 (i.e., ALTCAR96 =
          2, "no"), or if the respondent refused to answer Altcar96, or didn't know the answer, or if data for
          this question were otherwise missing, then each variable representing a type of alternative
          treatment received a code of -1 ("inapplicable").  If the person had received some type of
          alternative care (i.e., =1, "yes"), then each variable representing a type of alternative treatment
          received a code of 1 ("yes") if specified or a code of 2 ("no") if not specified.
         Those persons who had indicated receipt of alternative care were next asked to specify the type of
          alternative care practitioner used.  Response options included the following:
           massage therapist (MASSTH96)
           acupuncturist (ACUPTH96)
           physician (MDTREA96)
           nurse (NURTRT96)
           homeopathic or naturopathic doctor (HOMEOM96)
           chiropractor (CHIRO96)
           clergy, spiritualist, or channeler (CLERGY96)
           herbalist (HERBTR96)
           other (OTHALT96)
         One person could specify multiple types of practitioners.  If a person was reported not to have used
          alternative treatment, or if the respondent refused to answer ALTCAR96, or didn't know the
          answer, or if data for this question were otherwise missing, then each variable representing a type
          of alternative practitioner received a code of -1 ("inapplicable").  If the person had received some
          type of alternative care (i.e., ALTCAR96 = 1, "yes"), then each variable representing a type of
          alternative practitioner received a code of 1 ("yes") if specified or a code of 2 ("no") if not
          specified.
         Those persons who indicated receipt of alternative care were asked whether the use of
          complementary or alternative care was ever discussed with the person's regular doctor
          (DISCAL96), whether the person was ever referred for alternative care by a physician or other
          medical provider (REFRMD96), and whether the person consulted the alternative physical or
          complementary care practitioner(s) for a specific physical or mental health problem (ALCRSP96). 
          As with the other alternative care variables, responses to these questions received a code of -1
          ("inapplicable") if a person was reported not to have used any alternative treatment during 1996
          (i.e., ALTCAR96 = 2, "no"), or if the respondent refused to answer ALTCAR96, or didn't know
          the answer, or if data for this question were otherwise missing.
         For each person who used alternative care, respondents were asked approximately how many times
          in 1996 did the person actually visit these types of practitioners (ALCRVS96). Respondents
          provided an estimated number of visits.  Respondents who did not know the number of visits were
          asked to provide a range of visits (e.g., one time, 2-4 times, etc.); ALCRVE96 reflects their
          responses to this question. As with the other alternative care variables, responses to these questions
          received a code of -1 ("inapplicable") if a person was reported not to have used any alternative
          treatment during 1996 (i.e., ALTCAR96 = 2, "no"), or if the respondent refused to answer
          ALTCAR96, or didn't know the answer, or if data for this question were otherwise missing.
         Chiropractic treatment was not included in the list of alternative treatments used in this section of
          the questionnaire.  Information on use of chiropractic practitioners is available in the office-based
          visits section of the utilization variables (see 2.5.6).
         ALTCAR96 reports responses to this question for each person in the household.  If the answer to
          ALTCAR96 was "no" (2), "refused" (-7), or "don't know" (-8), then responses to all subsequent
          questions in this section were coded as not applicable (-1).
         Persons who had consulted a provider of complementary/alternative care were asked to report
          approximately how many times during 1996 the person had actually visited these types of
          practitioners.  ALCRVS96 reports responses to this question.  No editing was done to this variable. 
          If respondents could not provide an estimate of the total number of visits to practitioners of
          alternative care (i.e., ALCRVS96 is "don't know" (-8)), they were asked to estimate a range of
          visits.  Responses to the latter question are recorded in ALCRVE96.  Codes for ALCRVE96
          represent the following estimated ranges of visits to alternative care providers:
           1 - 1 time
           2 - 2 to 4 times
           3 - 5 to 10 times
           4 - 11 to 20 times
           5 - 21 to 30 times
           6 - 31 or more times
         For persons who had consulted a provider of  complementary/alternative care, question AP09
          asked for an estimate of the total amount spent for all alternative or complementary care visits
          (regardless of type of provider) during calendar 1996.  ALCREE96 reports these estimates.    If a
          respondent answered "don't know" (-8), then they were asked (AP10) to indicate a likely range of
          expenditures.  ALCREX96 contains responses to this question, using the following codes:
           1 - $1 to $100
           2 - $101 to $500
           3 - $501 to $1500
           4 - $1501 to $3000
           5 - $3001 to $5000
           6 - $5001 or more.
         No editing was performed for either ALCREE96 or ALCREX96.
         Respondents were asked whether health insurance paid for any of the person's complementary or
          alternative care visits.  INSALT96 has responses of "yes" (1), "no" (2), and  "does not have
          health insurance" (95).  A subsequent question, PERCIN96, asked respondents to estimate the
          percent of the total amount spent on complementary/alternative care visits that had been paid by
          insurance.  Those who had answered INSALT96 as "no" (2), "does not have health insurance"
          (95), "refused" (-7), or "don't know" (-8) were not asked PERCIN96 and received a code of -1
          for PERCIN96.
         The variables ALCREE96, ALCREX96, INSALT96, and PERCIN96 all pertain to visits to
          providers of alternative or complementary care.  PALTEX96, in contrast, asked respondents to
          estimate the total amount spent by the person on products or remedies that are associated with
          complementary/alternative care.  PALTEX96 reports these estimates in whole dollar amounts.  If a
          respondent answered "don't know" (-8), then they were asked to indicate a likely range of
          expenditures on alternative care products and remedies.  PALTEE96 reports these range estimates,
          using the following codes:
           1 - $1 to $50
           2 - $51 to $100
           3 - $101 to $200
           4 - $201 to $500
           5 - $501 or more
         No editing was performed on PALTEX96 and PALTEE96.
         When interpreting the cost and utilization variables for complementary/alternative care, analysts
          should remember that estimates of expenditures were obtained only for persons who had made a
          visit to a practitioner of complementary/alternative care.   In particular, estimates of expenditures
          on complementary/alternative products and remedies are based only on those who saw a
          practitioner of these types of care; expenditures on complementary/alternative products by persons
          who did not seek formal help from practitioners are not captured in this variable.
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        Preventive Care Variables
         For each person, excluding persons who died, a series of questions asked primarily about receipt of
          preventive care or screening examinations.  Questions varied in the applicable age or gender
          subgroups to which they pertained.  The list of variables in this series, along with their applicable
          subgroup, is as follows:
           DENTCHK3	frequency of dental check-ups
           All ages and both genders
           BLDPCHK3	time since last having blood pressure taken by a doctor, nurse, or other
          health professional
           Age > 17; both genders
           CHOLCHK3	time since last checking cholesterol level
           Age > 17; both genders
           PHYSICL3	time since last complete physical
           Age > 17; both genders
           FLUSHOT3	time since last flu shot
           Age > 17; both genders
           WEARDEN3	does person wear dentures
           Age > 34; both genders
           LOSTEET3	has person lost all adult teeth
           Age > 34; both genders
           PROSEXA3	time since last prostate exam
           Age > 17; male only
           PAPSMER3	time since last pap smear test
           Age > 17; female only
           BRSTEXA3	time since last breast exam
           Age > 17; female only
           MAMOGRM3 time since last mammogram
           Age > 39; female only
         For each of the above variables, a code of -1 ("inapplicable") was assigned if the person was
          deceased, or if the person did not belong to the applicable age or gender subgroups.
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        3.10	Utilization, Expenditures and Source of Payment Variables (TOTTCH96-RXOSR96) 
         The MEPS Household Component (HC) collects data in each round on use and expenditures for
          office and hospital-based care, home health care, dental services, vision aids, and prescribed
          medicines.  Data were collected for each sample person at the event level (e.g. doctor visit, hospital
          stay) and summed across rounds 1-3 (excluding 1997 events covered in round 3) to produce the
          annual utilization and expenditure data for 1996 in this file.  In addition, the MEPS Medical
          Provider Component (MPC) is a follow-back survey that collected data from a sample of medical
          providers and pharmacies that were used by sample persons in 1996.  Expenditure data collected in
          the MPC are generally regarded as more accurate than information collected in the HC and were
          used to improve the overall quality of MEPS expenditure data in this file (see sections 3.10.1-3.10.1.6 for description of methodology used to develop expenditure data).
         This file contains utilization and expenditure variables for several categories of health care
          services.  The utilization variables in this release supercede those released in MEPS public use file
          HC-003. In general, there is one utilization variable (based on HC responses only), 13 expenditure
          variables (derived from both HC and MPC responses), and 1 charge variable for each category of
          health care service.  The utilization variable is typically a count of the number of medical events
          reported for the category.  The 13 expenditure variables consist of an aggregate total payments
          variable, 10 main component source of payment category variables, and 2 additional source of
          payment category variables (see section  3.10.1.5 for description of source of payment categories).
          Expenditure variables for all categories of health care combined are also provided.
         The attached table in Appendix 1 provides an overview of the utilization and expenditure variables
          included in this file.  For each health service category, the table lists the corresponding utilization
          variable(s) and provides a general key to the expenditure variable names (13 per service category). 
          The first 3 characters of the expenditure variable names reflect the service category (except only 2
          characters for prescription medicines) while the subsequent 3 characters (*** in table) reflect the
          naming convention for the source of payment categories described in section 3.10.1.5 below
          (except only 2 characters for Veterans Administration).  The last 2 positions of all utilization and
          expenditure variable names reflect the survey year (i.e. 96).  More details are provided on the
          utilization and expenditure variables in sections 3.10.1 and 3.10.2 below.
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        3.10.1 	Expenditures Definition
         Expenditures on this file refer to what is paid for health care services.  More specifically,
          expenditures in MEPS are defined as the sum of direct payments for care provided during the year,
          including out-of-pocket payments and payments by private insurance, Medicaid, Medicare, and
          other sources.  Payments for over the counter drugs and for alternative care services are not
          included in MEPS total expenditures. Indirect payments not related to specific medical events,
          such as Medicaid Disproportionate Share and Medicare Direct Medical Education subsidies, are
          also not included.
         The definition of expenditures used in MEPS is somewhat different from the 1987 NMES and
          1977 NMCES surveys where "charges" rather than "sum of payments" were used to measure
          expenditures. This change was adopted because charges became a less appropriate proxy for
          medical expenditures during the 1990's due to the increasingly common practice of discounting
          charges.  Another change from the two prior surveys is that charges associated with uncollected
          liability, bad debt, and charitable care (unless provided by a public clinic or hospital) are not
          counted as expenditures because there are no payments associated with those classifications.
         While the concept of expenditures in MEPS has been operationalized as payments for health care
          services, variables reflecting charges for services received are also provided on the file (see section
          3.10.1.6).  Analysts should use caution when working with the charge variables because they do
          not typically represent actual dollars exchanged for services or the resource costs of those services.
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        3.10.1.1	Data Sources on Expenditures
         The expenditure data included on this file were derived from the MEPS Household and Medical
          Provider Components.  Only HC data were collected for nonphysician visits, dental and vision
          services, other medical equipment and services, and home health care not provided by an agency
          while data on expenditures for care provided by home health agencies were only collected in the
          MPC.  In addition to HC data, MPC data were collected for some office-based visits to physicians
          (or medical providers supervised by physicians), hospital-based events (e.g. inpatient stays,
          emergency room visits, and outpatient department visits), and prescribed medicines (see section
          3.10.2.7).  For these types of events, MPC data were used if complete; otherwise HC data were
          used if complete.  Missing data for events where HC data were not complete and MPC data were
          not collected or complete were derived through an imputation process (see section 3.10.1.2).
         A series of logical edits were applied to both the HC and MPC data to correct for several problems
          including outliers, copayments or charges reported as total payments, and reimbursed amounts that
          were reported as out of pocket payments.  In addition, edits were implemented to correct for
          misclassifications between Medicare and Medicaid and between Medicare HMO's and private
          HMO's as payment sources.  Data were not edited to insure complete consistency between the
          health insurance and source of payment variables on the file.
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        3.10.1.2	Imputation for Missing Expenditures and Data Adjustments
         Expenditure data were imputed to 1) replace missing data, 2) provide estimates for care delivered
          under capitated reimbursement arrangements, and 3) to adjust household reported insurance
          payments because respondents were often unaware that their insurer paid a discounted amount to
          the provider.  This section contains a general description of the approaches used for these three
          situations.  A more detailed description of the editing and imputation procedures will be provided
          in the documentation for the forthcoming MEPS event level files.
         Missing data on expenditures were imputed using a weighted sequential hot-deck procedure for
          most medical visits and services.  In general, this procedure imputes data from events with
          complete information to events with missing information but similar characteristics.  For each
          event type, selected predictor variables with known values (e.g., total charge, demographic
          characteristics, region, provider type, and characteristics of the event of care, such as whether it
          involved surgery) were used to form groups of donor events with known data on expenditures, as
          well as identical groups of recipient events with missing data.  Within such groups, data were
          assigned from donors to recipients, taking into account the weights associated with the MEPS
          complex survey design.  Only MPC data were used as donors for hospital-based events while data
          from both the HC and MPC were used as donors for office-based physician visits.  The general
          approach that was used to impute missing expenditure data on prescribed medicines is described in
          section 3.10.2.7 below.
         Because payments for medical care provided under capitated reimbursement arrangements and
          through public clinics and Veterans' Hospitals are not tied to particular medical events,
          expenditures for events covered under those types of arrangements and settings were also imputed. 
          Events covered under capitated arrangements were imputed from events covered under managed
          care arrangements that were paid based on a discounted fee-for-service method, while imputations
          for visits to public clinics and Veterans' Hospitals were based on similar events that were paid on a
          fee-for-service basis.  As for other events, selected predictor variables were used to form groups of
          donor and recipient events for the imputations.
         An adjustment was also applied to some HC reported expenditure data because an evaluation of
          matched HC/MPC data showed that respondents who reported that charges and payments were
          equal were often unaware that insurance payments for the care had been based on a discounted
          charge.  To compensate for this systematic reporting error, a weighted sequential hot-deck
          imputation procedure was implemented to determine an adjustment factor for HC reported
          insurance payments when charges and payments were reported to be equal.  As for the other
          imputations, selected predictor variables were used to form groups of donor and recipient events
          for the imputation process.
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        3.10.1.3	Methodology for Flat Fee Expenditures
         Most of the expenditures for medical care reported by MEPS participants are associated with single
          medical events.  However, in some situations there is one charge that covers multiple contacts
          between a medical provider and patient (e.g. obstetrician services, orthodontia).  In these situations
          (generally called flat or global fees), total payments for the flat or global fee were included if the
          initial service was provided in 1996.  For example, all payments for an orthodontist's fee that
          covered multiple visits over three years were included if the initial visit occurred in 1996. 
          However, if a visit in 1996 to an orthodontist was part of a flat fee in which the initial visit
          occurred in 1995, then none of the payments for the flat fee were included.
         The approach used to count expenditures for flat fees may create what appear to be inconsistencies
          between utilization and expenditure variables.  For example, if several visits under a flat fee
          arrangement occurred in 1996 but the first visit occurred in 1995, then none of the expenditures were
          included, resulting in low expenditures relative to utilization for that person.  Conversely, the flat fee
          methodology may result in high expenditures for some persons relative to their utilization.  For
          example, all of the expenditures for an expensive flat fee were included even if only the first visit
          covered by the fee had occurred in 1996.  On average, the methodology used for flat fees should result
          in a balance between overestimation and underestimation of expenditures in a particular year.
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        3.10.1.4	Zero Expenditures
         There are some medical events reported by respondents where the payments were zero.  This could
          occur for several reasons including (1) free care was provided, (2) bad debt was incurred, (3) care was
          covered under a flat fee arrangement beginning in an earlier year, or (4) follow-up visits were provided
          without a separate charge (e.g. after a surgical procedure).  In summary, these types of events have no
          impact on the person level expenditure variables contained in this file.
         3.10.1.5	Source of Payment Categories
         In addition to total expenditures, variables are provided which itemize expenditures according to
          the major source of payment categories. These categories are:
         1.	Out of pocket by user or family (SLF);
         2.	Medicare (MCR);
         3.	Medicaid (MCD);
         4.	Private Insurance (PRV);
         5.	Veteran's Administration, excluding CHAMPVA (VA);
         6.	CHAMPUS (i.e. TRICARE) or CHAMPVA (CHM);
         7.	Other Federal Sources--includes Indian Health Service, Military Treatment Facilities, and
          other care provided by the Federal government (OFD);
         8.	Other State and Local Source--includes community and neighborhood clinics, State and local
          health departments, and State programs other than Medicaid (STL);
         9.	Worker's Compensation (WCP);
         10.	Other Unclassified Sources--includes sources such as automobile, homeowner's, liability, and
          other miscellaneous or unknown sources (OSR).
         Two additional source of payment variables were created to classify payments for particular
          persons that appear inconsistent due to differences between the survey questions on health
          insurance coverage and sources of payment for medical events.  These variables include:
         11.	Other Private (OPR)--any type of private insurance payments reported for persons not
          reported to have any private health insurance coverage during the year as defined in MEPS
          (i.e. for hospital and physician services); and
         12.	Other Public (OPU)--Medicaid payments reported for persons who were not reported to be
          enrolled in the Medicaid program at any time during the year.
         Though relatively small in magnitude, users should exercise caution when interpreting the
          expenditures associated with the OPR and OPU categories.  While these payments stem from
          apparent inconsistent responses to the health insurance and source of payment questions in the
          survey, some of these inconsistencies may have logical explanations.  For example, private
          insurance coverage in MEPS is defined as having a major medical plan covering hospital and
          physician services.  If a MEPS sample person did not have such coverage but had a single service
          type insurance plan (e.g. dental insurance) that paid for a particular episode of care, those payments
          may be classified as "other private".  Some of the "other public" payments may stem from
          confusion between Medicaid and other state and local programs or may be for persons who were
          not enrolled in Medicaid, but were presumed eligible by a provider who ultimately received
          payments from the program.
         The naming conventions used for the source of payment expenditure variables are shown in
          parentheses in the list of categories above and in the key to the attached table.  In addition, total
          expenditure variables (EXP in key) based on the sum of the 12 source of payment variables above
          are provided.
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        3.10.1.6	Charge Variables
         In addition to the expenditure variables described above, a variable reflecting total charges is
          provided for each type of service category (except prescribed medicines).  This variable
          represents the sum of all fully established charges for care received and usually does not reflect
          actual payments made for services, which can be substantially lower due to factors such as
          negotiated discounts, bad debt, and free care (see above). The naming convention used for the
          charge variables (TCH) is also included in the key to the attached table.  The total charge variable
          across services (TOTTCH96) excludes prescribed medicines.
         3.10.2	Utilization and Expenditure Variables by Type of Medical Service
         The following sections summarize definitional, conceptual and analytic considerations when using
          the utilization and expenditure variables in this file.  Separate discussions are provided for each
          MEPS medical service category.
         
         3.10.2.1	Medical Provider Visits (i.e., Office-Based Visits)
         Medical provider visits consist of encounters that took place primarily in office-based settings and
          clinics.   Care provided in other settings such as a hospital, nursing home, or a person's home are not
          included in this category.
         The total number of office based visits reported for 1996 (OBTOTV96) as well as the number of such
          visits to physicians (OBDRV96) and nonphysician providers (OBOTHV96) are contained in this file. 
          For a small proportion of sample persons, the sum of the physician and nonphysician visit variables
          (OBDRV96+OBOTHV96) is less than the total number of office-based visits variable (OBTOTV96)
          because OBTOTV96 contains reported visits where the respondent did not know the type of provider.
         Non-physician visits (OBOTHV96) include visits to the following types of providers:  chiropractors,
          midwives, nurses and nurse practitioners, optometrists, podiatrists, physician's assistants, physical
          therapists, occupational therapists, psychologists, social workers, technicians,
          receptionists/clerks/secretaries, or other medical providers.  Separate utilization variables are included
          for selected types of more commonly seen non-physician providers including chiropractors
          (OBCHIR96), nurses/nurse practitioners (OBNURS96), optometrists (OBOPTO96), physician
          assistants (OBASST96), and physical or occupational therapists (OBTHER96).
         Expenditure variables associated with all medical provider visits, physician visits, and non-physician
          visits in office-based settings can be identified using the attached table.  As for the corresponding
          utilization variables, the sum of the physician and non-physician visit expenditure variables (e.g.
          OBDEXP96+OBOEXP96) is less than the total office-based expenditure variable (OBVEXP96) for
          a small proportion of sample persons.  This can occur because OBVEXP96 includes visits where the
          respondent did not know the type of provider seen.
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        3.10.2.2	Hospital Events
         Separate utilization variables for hospital care are provided for each type of setting (inpatient,
          outpatient department, and emergency room) along with two expense variables per setting; one for
          basic hospital facility expenses and another for payments to physicians who billed separately for
          services provided at the hospital.  These payments are referred to as "separately billing doctor" or
          SBD expenses.
         Hospital facility expenses include all expenses for direct hospital care, including room and board,
          diagnostic and laboratory work, x-rays, and similar charges, as well as any physician services
          included in the hospital charge.  Separately billing doctor (SBD) expenses typically cover services
          provided to patients in hospital settings by providers like radiologists, anesthesiologists, and
          pathologists, whose charges are often not included in hospital bills.
         Hospital Outpatient Visits
         Variables for the total number of reported visits to hospital outpatient departments in 1996
          (OPTOTV96) as well as the number of outpatient department visits to physicians (OPDRV96) and
          non-physician providers (OPOTHV96) are contained in this file.  For a small proportion of sample
          persons, the sum of the physician and non-physician visit variables (OPDRV96+OPOTHV96) is
          less than the total number of outpatient visits variable (OPTOTV96) because OPTOTV96 contains
          reported visits where the respondent did not provide information on the type of provider seen.
         Expenditure variables (both facility and SBD) associated with all medical provider visits, physician
          visits, and non-physician visits in outpatient departments can be identified using the attached table. 
          As for the corresponding utilization variables, the sum of the physician and non-physician
          expenditure variables (e.g. OPVEXP96+OPOEXP96 for facility expenses) is less than the variable
          for total outpatient department expenditures (OPFEXP96) for a small proportion of sample
          persons.  This can occur because OPFEXP96 includes visits where the respondent did not know
          the type of provider seen.  No expenditure variables are provided for health care consultations that
          occurred over the telephone.
         Hospital Emergency Room Visits
         The variable ERTOT96 represents a count of all emergency room visits reported for the survey
          year.  Expenditure variables associated with ERTOT96 are identified in the attached table.  It
          should be noted that hospitals usually include expenses associated with emergency room visits that
          immediately result in an inpatient stay with the charges and payments for the inpatient stay. 
          Therefore, to avoid the potential for double counting when imputing missing expenses, separately
          reported expenditures for emergency room visits that were identified in the MPC as directly linked
          to an inpatient stay were included as part of the inpatient stay only (see below).  This strategy to
          avoid double counting resulted in $0 expenditures for these emergency room visits. However, these
          $0 emergency room visits are still counted as separate visits in the utilization variable ERTOT96.
         Hospital Inpatient Stays
         Two measures of total inpatient utilization are provided on the file:  (1) total number of hospital
          discharges (IPDIS96) and (2) the total number of nights associated with these discharges
          (IPNGTD96).  IPDIS96 includes hospital stays where the dates of admission and discharge were
          reported as identical.  These "zero night stays" can be included or excluded from inpatient analyses
          at the user's discretion (see last paragraph of this section).  If the number of nights in the hospital
          could not be computed for any reported stay for a person, then IPNGTD96 was assigned a missing
          value.
         Expenditure variables associated with hospital inpatient stays are identified in the attached table.
          To the extent possible, payments associated with emergency room visits that immediately preceded
          an inpatient stay are included with the inpatient expenditures (see above) and payments associated
          with healthy newborns are included with expenditures for the mother (see next paragraph for more
          detail).
         Data used to construct the inpatient utilization and expenditure variables for newborns were edited
          to exclude stays where the newborn left the hospital on the same day as the mother.  This edit was
          applied because discharges for infants without complications after birth were not consistently
          reported in the survey and charges for newborns without complications are typically included in the
          mother's hospital bill.  However, if the newborn was discharged at a later date than the mother was
          discharged, then the discharge was considered a separate stay for the newborn when constructing
          the utilization and expenditure variables.
         Some analysts may prefer to exclude zero night stays from inpatient analyses and/or count these
          stays as ambulatory visits.  Therefore, a separate use variable is provided which contains a count of
          the number of inpatient events where the reported dates of admission and discharge were the same
          (IPZERO96).  This variable can be subtracted from IPDIS96 to exclude "zero night" stays from
          inpatient utilization estimates.  In addition, separate expenditure variables are provided for "zero
          night" facility expenses (ZIFEXP96) and for separately billing doctor expenses (ZIDEXP96). 
          Analysts who choose to exclude zero-night stays from inpatient expenditure analyses need to
          subtract the zero-night expenditure variable from the corresponding expenditure variable for total
          inpatient stays (e.g. IPFEXP96-ZIFEXP96 for facility expenses, IPDEXP96-ZIDEXP96 for
          separately billing doctor expenses).
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        3.10.2.3	Dental Visits
         The total number of dental visits variable (DVTOT96) includes those to any person(s) for dental
          care including general dentists, dental hygienists, dental technicians, dental surgeons, orthodontists,
          endodontists, and periodontists.  Additional variables are provided for the numbers of dental visits
          to general dentists (DVGEN96) and to orthodontists (DVORTH96).  For a small proportion of
          sample persons, the sum of the general dentist and orthodontist visit variables
          (DVGEN96+DVORTH96) is greater than the total number of dental visits (DVTOT96).  This
          result can only occur for persons who were reported to have seen both a general dentist and
          orthodontist in the same visit(s).  When this occurred, expenditures for the visit were included as
          orthodontist expenses but not as general dentist expenses.  Expenditure variables for all three
          categories of dental providers can be identified using the attached table.
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        3.10.2.4	Home Health Care
         In contrast to other types of medical events where data were collected on a per visit basis,
          information on home health care utilization is collected in MEPS on a per month basis. Variables
          are provided which indicate the total number of months in 1996 where home health care was
          received from any type of paid or unpaid caregiver (HHTOTM96), agencies, hospitals, or nursing
          homes (HHAGM96), self-employed persons (HHINDM96), and unpaid informal caregivers not
          living with the sample person (HHINFM96).
         In addition to monthly utilization variables, variables are also provided for the number of "provider
          days" of care received.  The number of provider days represents the sum across months of the
          number of days on which home health care was received, with days summed across all providers
          seen.  For example, if a person received care in one month from one provider on 2 different days,
          then the number of provider days would equal 2.  The number of provider days would also equal 2
          if a person received care from 2 different providers on the same day. However, if a person received
          care from 1 provider 2 times in the same day, then the provider days would equal 1.  As for the
          month variables described above, separate variables for provider days are included for each source
          of care category (HHTOTD96, HHAGD96, HHINDD96, and HHINFD96).  These variables were
          assigned missing values if the number of provider days could not be computed for any month in
          which the specific type of home health care was received.
         Separate expenditure variables are provided for agency-sponsored home health care (includes care
          provided by home health agencies, hospitals, and nursing homes) and care provided by self-employed persons.  The attached table identifies the home health care utilization and expenditure
          variables contained in the file.
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         3.10.2.5	Vision Aids
         Expenditure variables for the purchase of glasses and/or contact lenses are identified in the
          attached table.  Due to the data collection methodology, it was not possible to determine whether
          vision items that were reported in round 3 had been purchased in 1996 or 1997.  Therefore,
          expenses reported in round 3 were only included if more than half of the person's reference period
          for the round was in 1996.
         3.10.2.6	Other Medical Equipment and Services
         This category includes expenditures for ambulance services, orthopedic items, hearing devices,
          prostheses, bathroom aids, medical equipment, disposable supplies, alterations/modifications, and
          other miscellaneous items or services that were obtained, purchased or rented during the year. 
          Respondents were only asked once (in round 3) about their total annual expenditures and were not
          asked about their frequency of use of these services.  Expenditure variables representing the
          combined expenses for these supplies and services are identified in the Appendix 1 table.
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        3.10.2.7	Prescribed Medicines
         There is one total utilization variable (RXTOT96) and 13 expenditure variables included on the
          1996 full-year file relating to prescribed medicines.  These 13 expenditure variables include an
          annual total expenditure variable (RXEXP96) and 12 corresponding annual source of payment
          variables (RXSLF96, RXMCR96, RXMCD96, RXPRV96, RXVA96, RXCHM96, RXOFD96,
          RXSTL96, RXWCP96, RXOSR96, RXOPR96, and RXOPU96).  Unlike the other event types, the
          prescribed medicine events have some remaining inconsistencies in the data when comparing
          information from the insurance section of the Household Component and source of payment
          information from the Pharmacy Component (more specifically, discrepancies between Medicare
          only household insurance responses and Medicaid source of payment provided by pharmacy
          providers).  These inconsistencies remain unedited because there was strong evidence from the
          Pharmacy Component that these were indeed Medicaid payments.  All of these types of Household
          Component events were either exact matches to events in the Pharmacy Component or refills of
          exact matches, and in addition, all of these types of events were purchases by persons with positive
          weights.  The total utilization variable is a count of all prescribed medications initially purchased
          or otherwise obtained during 1996, as well as any additional acquisitions of the medication.  The
          total expenditure variable sums all amounts paid out-of-pocket and by third party payers for each
          prescription purchased in 1996.  No variables reflecting charges for prescription medicines are
          included because a large proportion of respondents to the pharmacy component survey did not
          provide charge data (see below).
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        Prescribed Medicines Data Collected
         Data regarding prescription drugs were obtained through the household questionnaire and a
          pharmacy component survey.  During each round of the MEPS HC, all respondents were asked to
          supply the name of any prescribed medication they or their family members purchased or otherwise
          obtained during that round.  For each medication and in each round, the following information was
          collected: whether any free samples of the medication were received; the name(s) of any health
          problems the medication was prescribed for; the number of times the prescription drug was
          obtained or purchased; the year, month, and day on which the person first used the medication; and
          a list of the names, addresses, and types of pharmacies that filled the household's prescriptions. 
          Also, during the Household Component, respondents were asked if they send in claim forms for
          their prescriptions (self-filers) or if their pharmacy providers do this automatically for them at the
          point of purchase (non-self-filers).  For non-self-filers, charge and payment information was
          collected in the pharmacy component survey.  However, charge and payment information was
          collected for self-filers in the household questionnaire, because payments by private third party
          payers for self-filers' purchases would not be available from a pharmacy follow-back survey.
         Pharmacy providers identified by the household were contacted by mail for the pharmacy
          component survey if permission was obtained in writing from the person with the prescription to
          release their pharmacy records.  The signed permission forms were provided to the various
          establishments prior to making any requests for information.  Each establishment was informed of
          all persons participating in the survey that had prescriptions filled there in 1996 and a
          computerized printout containing information about these prescriptions was sought.  For each
          medication listed, the following information was requested: date filled; National Drug Code
          (NDC); medication name; strength of medicine (amount and unit); quantity (package size and
          amount dispensed); total charge; and payments by source.
         When diabetic supplies, such as syringes and insulin, were reported in the other medical supply
          section of the MEPS HC questionnaire as having been obtained during the round, the interviewer
          was directed to collect information on these items in the prescription drug section of MEPS.  Data
          on expenses for these items were collected in and imputed from the pharmacy component survey.
         Prescribed Medicines Data Editing and Imputation
         The general approach to preparing the household prescription data for this file was to utilize the
          pharmacy component prescription data to assign expenditure values to the household drug
          mentions.  For self-filers, information on payment sources was retained to the extent that these data
          were reported by the household in the charge and payment section of the household questionnaire. 
          A matching program was adopted to link pharmacy survey drugs and the corresponding drug
          information to household drug mentions.  To improve the quality of these matches, all drugs on the
          household and pharmacy files were coded based on the medication names provided by the
          household and pharmacy, and when available, the National Drug Code (NDC) provided in the
          pharmacy survey.  Considerable editing was done prior to the matching to correct data
          inconsistencies in both data sets and fill in missing data and correct outliers on the pharmacy file.
         Drug price per unit outliers were analyzed on the pharmacy file by first identifying the average
          wholesale unit price (AWUP) of the drug by linkage through the NDC to a proprietary data base. 
          In general, prescription drug unit prices were deemed to be outliers by comparing unit prices
          reported in the pharmacy data base to the AWUP and were edited, as necessary.
         Round 3 household drug mentions in MEPS were not identified in the HC as 1996 or 1997 drug
          events for persons in households in which their Round 3 began in 1996 and ended in 1997.  All
          exact matches to pharmacy survey drug events for persons whose pharmacies participated were
          classified as 1996 drug purchases.  Any remaining Round 3 household drug mentions for persons
          with Round 3 spanning both years were randomly allocated to 1996 or 1997 based on the
          proportion of the household's Round 3 period in each year.
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        4.0	Survey Sample Information
         4.1 	Sample Design and Response Rates - Full Year
         The MEPS is designed to produce estimates at the national and regional level over time for the
          civilian, non-institutionalized population of the United States and some subpopulations of interest. 
          The health care utilization data in this public use set pertain to calendar year 1996 and were
          collected in Rounds 1,2, and 3 of the survey. For Round 3, with a reference period that covers 1996
          through 1997, only the utilization data collected that occurred in calendar year 1996 are provide on
          the file.
         The 1996 MEPS sample consisted of a subsample of households (occupied dwelling units) that
          responded to the 1995 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) in the two panels reserved for the
          MEPS.  Analysis can be undertaken using both the individual and the family as units of analysis.
         For detailed information on the sample design, see: Cohen, S. Sample Design of the 1996 Medical
          Expenditure Panel Survey Household Component. Rockville (MD): Agency for Health Care Policy
          and Research; 1997. MEPS Methodology Report, No. 2. AHCPR Pub. No. 97-0027.
         MEPS-Linked to the National Health Interview Survey
         The sample of 10,639 households (occupied dwelling units) for the 1996 Panel of MEPS consisted
          of a nationally representative subsample of the households responding to the 1995 National Health
          Interview Survey (NHIS).  The NHIS sample design has three stages of sample selection: an area
          sample of PSUs; a sample of segments (single or groups of blocks or block equivalents) within
          sampled PSUs; and a sample of housing units within segments.  Among initially sampled
          households, those containing Hispanics and blacks were oversampled at rates of approximately 2
          and 1.5, respectively, times the rate of remaining households.  These same rates of oversampling
          are reflected in the MEPS sample of households.  The only major difference in the definition of a
          household between NHIS and MEPS is that college aged students living away from home during
          the school year were interviewed at their place of residence for the NHIS but were identified by
          and linked to their parents' household for MEPS. A link file for linking the 1996 MEPS HC PUFs
          to the 1996 NHIS PUFs is available from AHRQ upon request.
         Response Rates
         Since the 1996 MEPS Household Survey sample was selected from a nationally representative sub-sample of households who were part of the 1995 NHIS, the overall response was derived from
          three component response rates.  The NHIS response rate achieved for the households eligible for
          the MEPS was 93.9 percent.  Of the 10,639 responding NHIS dwelling units eligible for the
          MEPS, 99.6 percent were identified with sufficient information to permit MEPS data collection. 
          Within these dwelling units, there were 11,429 eligible reporting units targeted for interviews in
          Round 1, of which 83.1 percent responded to the first core MEPS interview.  Two percent of the
          reporting units fielded in Round 1 could not be located; 15 percent were located and declined to
          participate in the MEPS interview, accounting for the 17 percent reporting unit nonresponse. 
          Overall, the joint NHIS - Round 1 response rate for the 1996 MEPS household survey was 77.7
          percent (.939 x .996 x .831).
         In order to be considered a responding survey participant in MEPS for the purpose of deriving
          annual 1996 estimates, the person had to be key and inscope with data provided for their entire
          period of eligibility in 1996. If all the key, inscope and eligible sample participants in MEPS with
          positive values for the MEPS Round 1 person level weight, in addition to new key and inscope
          respondents who joined a responding household in 1996 after Round 1 (here, the new respondent
          acquiring the sampling weight of the family they joined), responded for their entire period of
          eligibility in 1996, no additional adjustment for part year survey nonresponse over the course of
          Rounds 1-3 would be necessary.  Of 23,881 sample participants identified in MEPS, 21,571 or
          90.33 percent provided data for their entire period of eligibility in 1996.  Consequently, the overall
          MEPS person level response rate for deriving annual estimates in 1996 was 70.2 percent (.777 x
          .903), after factoring in the impact of survey attrition.
             Return To Table Of 
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        4.2		Sample Weights and Variance  Estimation Variables - Full Year
         4.2.1	Person Level Estimation  using this MEPS PUF
         Overview
         There is a single person level weight variable called WTDPER96.  However, care should be taken 
          in its application as it permits both "point-in-time" and "range of time" estimates, depending on 
          the variables used to define the set of persons of interest for analysis. A person level weight was
          assigned to each key, inscope person who responded to MEPS for the  full period of time that he or
          she was inscope during 1996.  A key person either was a member of an NHIS household at the
          time of the NHIS interview, or became a member of such a household after being out-of-scope at
          the time of the 1995 NHIS (examples of the latter situation include newborns and persons returning
          from military service, an institution, or living outside the United States).  A person is in scope
          whenever he or she is a member of the civilian noninstitutionalized portion of the U.S. population.
         
          Developing Person Level MEPS Estimates
         The data in this file can be used to develop estimates on persons in the civilian noninstitutionalized
          population on December 31, 1996 and for the slightly larger population of persons in the civilian
          noninstitutionalized population at any time during 1996.  To obtain a cross-sectional (point-in-time) estimate for all inscope persons living in the country on December 31, 1996, include cases
          with both WTDPER96>0 (a positive person level weight) and INSC1231=1 (the person is inscope
          on December 31, 1996).  To obtain an estimate for all persons who were inscope at some time in
          1996, include all cases with WTDPER96>0.  After selecting the appropriate cases, apply the
          weight variable WTDPER96 to the analytic variable(s) of interest to obtain national estimates.  The
          following table contains a summary of cases to include and sample sizes for these two populations
          (for shorthand purposes the term "general" is used to indicate the "civilian, non-institutionalized"
          component of the U.S. population). 
       
          
            | Population of Interest  | 
            Cases to Include | 
            Sample
              Size | 
           
          
            | General Population on December 31,
              1996 | 
            WTDPER96>0 and INSC1231=1 | 
            21,326 | 
           
          
            | General Population over the course of
              1996  | 
            WTDPER96>0  | 
            21,571 | 
           
         
          Details on Person Weights Construction
         The person level weight WTDPER96 was developed using the MEPS Round 1 person-level weight 
          as a base weight (for key, inscope respondents who joined an RU after Round 1, the Round 1 RU 
          weight served as a "base" weight).  The weighting process included an adjustment for nonresponse
          over Round 2 and  the 1996 portion of Round 3 as well as poststratification to population control
          figures for December  1996 (these figures were derived by scaling the population totals obtained
          from the March 1997  Current Population Survey (CPS) to reflect the Census Bureau estimated
          population distribution  across age and sex categories as of December, 1996). Variables used in the
          establishment of person level poststratification control figures included: poverty status (below
          poverty, from 100 to 125 percent of poverty, from 125 to 200 percent of poverty, from 200 to 400
          percent of poverty, at least 400 percent of poverty); census region (Northeast, Midwest, South,
          West); MSA status (MSA, non-MSA); race/ethnicity (Hispanic, black but non-Hispanic, and
          other); sex, and age. Overall, the weighted population estimate for the civilian non-institutionalized 
          population for December 31, 1996 is 265,439,511 (WTDPER96>0 and  INSC1231=1).  The
          inclusion of key, in scope persons who were not in scope on December 31, 1996 brings the
          estimated total number of persons represented by the MEPS respondents over the course of the
          year up to 268,905,490 (WTDPER96>0).  The weighting process included post stratification to
          population totals obtained from the 1996 Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey (MCBS) for the
          number of deaths among Medicare beneficiaries in 1996, and post stratification to population totals
          obtained from the 1996 MEPS Nursing Home Component for the number of individuals admitted
          to nursing homes.
         The MEPS round 1 weights incorporated the following components: the  original household
          probability of selection for the NHIS; ratio-adjustment to NHIS national  population estimates at
          the household (occupied dwelling unit) level; adjustment for nonresponse  at the dwelling unit
          level for Round 1; and poststratification to figures at the family and person  level obtained from the
          March 1996 CPS data base.
          Coverage
         The target population for MEPS in this file is the 1996 U.S. civilian noninstitutionalized
          population.  However, the MEPS sampled households are a subsample of the NHIS households
          interviewed in mid-1995.  New households created after these NHIS interviews and consisting
          exclusively of persons who entered the target population in late 1995 or during 1996 (i.e. families
          of immigrants, persons who leaving the military or returning from residence in another country,
          and/or persons leaving institutions) are not covered by MEPS. However, these uncovered persons
          constitute only a negligible proportion of the MEPS target population.
             Return To Table Of 
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        4.2.2	Family Level Estimation Using this MEPS PUF
         There are two family weight variables called WTFAMF96 and WTCFAM96 that are provided in
          this release.  In general, WTFAMF96 can be used to make estimates for the cross-section of
          families in the U.S. civilian noninstitutionalized population on December 31, 1996. WTCFAM96
          is provided to make estimates for the families as defined according to the guidelines used by the
          Current Population Survey (CPS-like).  In addition, estimates can be constructed using
          WTFAMF96 that also include families that existed at some time during 1996 but became out-of-scope for the survey prior to the end of the year (e.g., all family members moved out of the country,
          died, etc.).
         Definition of Family Estimates
         A family is defined in MEPS as two or more persons living together in the same household who
          are related by blood, marriage, or adoption, as well as foster children.  Other MEPS families
          include unmarried persons living together who consider themselves as a family unit. Single persons
          not living with a relative or a person identified as "significant other" have also been assigned a
          family level weight (but can be included or excluded from estimates).  Relatives identified as usual
          residents of the household who were not there at the time of the interview, such as college students
          living away from their parents' home during the school year, were considered as members of the
          family that identified them.
         To make estimates at the family level, it is necessary to prepare a family level file containing one
          record per family (see instructions below), with family level summary characteristics and the
          family-level weight variable (WTFAMF96).  Each MEPS family unit is uniquely identified by the
          combination of the variables DUID and FAMIDYR. The number of persons in MEPS sample
          families' ranges from 1 to 14.  Only persons with positive nonzero family weight values
          (WTFAMF96>0) are candidates for inclusion in family estimates.
         Three sets of families for whom estimates can be obtained are defined in the table below (along
          with respective sample sizes).  Persons with FMRS1231=1 were in scope for the survey on
          12/31/96 and therefore part of a MEPS family on 12/31/96.  The more expansive definition of
          families (second row in table) includes families and members of families who were not in scope at
          the end of the year. The third row is for CPS-like families excluding foster children.  While MEPS
          includes individual persons as family units (about one-third of all units) to cover the entire civilian
          noninstitutionalized population, analysts may restrict their analyses to families with 2 or more
          members using the family size variables shown in the table.
             Return To Table Of 
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            | Population of Interest | 
            Cases to
              Include | 
            Sample
              Size | 
            Family Size
              Variable | 
           
          
            | Cross-section of Families in the Civilian
              Noninstitutionalized Population on 12/31/96 | 
            WTFAMF96>0
              & FMRS1231=1 | 
            8,586 | 
            FAMS1231 | 
           
          
            | Families in the Civilian Noninstitutionalized
              Population on 12/31/96 plus families and
              members of families in existence earlier in
              1996 who were not part of the civilian
              noninstitutionalized population on 12/31/96 | 
            WTFAMF96>0 | 
            8,665 | 
            FAMSZEYR | 
           
          
            | CPS-like families excluding foster children | 
            WTCFAM96>0 | 
            8,826 | 
            FCSZ1231 | 
           
         
        Instructions to Create Family Estimates
         Following is a summary of the necessary steps to use the variables in this release for family level
          estimation based on MEPS type definition of families.
           1.			Concatenate the variables DUID and FAMIDYR into a new variable (e.g.
          DUIDFAMY).
           2.		To create a family level file, sort by DUIDFAMY and then subset to one record per
          DUIDFAMY by retaining only the reference person record (FAMRFPYR=1) for each
          value of DUIDFAMY.  If aggregate measures for families' are needed for analytic
          purposes (e.g. means or totals), then those measures need to be computed using person-level information within families and attached to the family record.  For other types of
          variables, analysts frequently use characteristics of the reference person to represent
          family characteristics.
           3.		Apply the weight WTFAMF96 to the analytic variable(s) of interest to obtain national
          family estimates.
           4.		Use CPSFAMID, FCRP1231, and WTCFAM96 in places of FAMIDYR, FAMRFPYR,
          and WTFAMF96 to make estimates as of 12/31/1996 for CPS-like families excluding
          foster children.
         Details on Family Weight Construction and Estimated Number of Families
         To develop the family level weight (WTFAMF96), the person level weight (WTDPER96) of the
          family reference person (FAMRFPYR=1) was used as the base weight for all responding full year
          families.  Then, for responding families eligible for weighting and in existence at the end of 1996,
          these base weights were poststratified to population control figures from the Current Population
          Survey (CPS) for December 1996 (these figures were derived by scaling the population totals
          obtained from the March 1997 CPS to reflect family estimates as of December, 1996).  The family
          level poststratification incorporated the following variables: census region; MSA status;
          race/ethnicity of reference person (Hispanic, black but non Hispanic, and other); family type
          (reference person married, living with spouse; male reference person, unmarried or spouse not
          present; female reference person, unmarried or spouse not present); age of reference person; and
          family size as of December 31, 1996.
         Overall, the weighted population estimate for the number of family units containing at least one
          member of the U.S. civilian noninstitutionalized population on  December 31, 1996 is 108,621,123
          (those families identified by WTFAMF96>0 and FMRS1231=1).  The inclusion of families whose
          members left the inscope population prior to December 31, 1996 brought the estimated total
          number of families represented by the MEPS responding families up to 109,482,489 (those
          families identified by WTFAMF96>0). While estimated total number of CPS-like families
          excluding foster children is 111,533,862 (those families identified by WTCFAM96)
             Return To Table Of 
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        4.2.3		Variance Estimation
         To obtain estimates of variability (such as the standard error of sample estimates or corresponding
          confidence intervals) for estimates based on MEPS survey data, one needs to take into account the
          complex sample design of MEPS. Various approaches can be used to develop such estimates of
          variance including use of the Taylor series or various replication methodologies.  Replicate weights
          have not been developed for the MEPS 1996 data.  Variables needed to implement a Taylor series
          estimation approach is described in the paragraph below.
         Using a Taylor Series approach, variance estimation strata and the variance estimation PSUs within
          these strata must be specified.  The corresponding variables on the MEPS full year utilization
          database are VARSTR96 and VARPSU96, respectively. Specifying a "with replacement" design in
          a computer software package such as SUDAAN (Shah, 1996) should provide standard errors
          appropriate for assessing the variability of MEPS survey estimates.  It should be noted that the
          number of degrees of freedom associated with estimates of variability indicated by such a package
          may not appropriately reflect the actual number available.  For MEPS sample estimates for
          characteristics generally distributed throughout the country (and thus the sample PSUs), there are
          over 100 degrees of freedom associated with the corresponding estimates of variance.
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        4.3	Sample Weights and Variance Estimation Variables - Round 2
         Person Level Weight
         The person level weight variable on File 2 is WGTSP2T.  A person level weight was assigned to
          all key, eligible and in-scope members of the U.S. civilian, non-institutionalized population for
          whom data were collected in both the first and second rounds of data collection for the 1996 MEPS
          HC.  This weight reflects the original household probability of selection for the NHIS, ratio-adjustment to NHIS national population estimates at the household level, adjustment for non-participation in MEPS HC at the dwelling unit level, and poststratification to figures obtained from
          March, 1996 Current Population Survey data at the family and person level.  The person level
          poststratification reflected population distributions across census region; race/ethnicity (Hispanic,
          black/non-Hispanic, other); sex; and age.  Overall, the weighted population estimate is
          263,515,813 for the civilian noninstitutionalized population.
         The person level estimates produced from these files are derived from a nationally representative
          sample of the civilian non-institutionalized population defined as of the first half of 1996. The
          estimates are to be interpreted as attributes of the target population defined as of the first half of
          1996.
         Family Level Weight
         The family level weight on File 2 is WGTRU2T.  A family was defined to be two or more persons
          living together who are related by blood, marriage, adoption, or foster care.  The members of a
  "family" unit can vary over time due to births, deaths, and migration in and out of family units.  For
          the purposes of assigning a family level weight for each round of MEPS HC, a family unit was
          defined as the set of related people living together during the reference period for whom data were
          collected (for Round 1, from January 1, 1996 to the date of the Round 1 interview and for Round 2,
          from the date of the Round 1 interview to the date of the Round 2 interview).  Persons who died
          during the reference period were considered to be family members, as were people for whom data
          could be collected for a portion of the round if a person left the civilian, non-institutionalized
          population later in the round (i.e., if a person was institutionalized, left the country, or joined the
          military).  College age students living away from home during the school year also were considered
          family members.  A family member need not be key nor in-scope.  Such persons are family
          members for the "snapshot" of the family represented by the Round and may have made important
          contributions to such items as a family's income or health care coverage.
         All responding family units with at least one key, eligible, in-scope person as well as reporting
          units consisting of a single key, in-scope, eligible respondent received a family level weight.  At
          the family level, poststratification to March, 1996 CPS figures was undertaken reflecting factors
          such as family type (reference person married/spouse present; male reference person/no spouse
          present; female reference person/no spouse present), size of family, age of reference person,
          location of family (census region and MSA status), and race/ethnicity of reference person.  The
          weighted estimate of the number of family units (including single person units) containing at least
          one member of the U.S. civilian non-institutionalized population is 110,206,950.  To produce
          family level estimates consistent with this population, a family level file needs to be prepared
          containing one record per family, with family level summary characteristics (based on persons in
          the family) and the family-level weight variable (WGTRU2T).
             Return To Table Of 
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        Estimation Issues
         Analysts should note the following:
           1.	When analyzing Round 2 data by combining the File 2 data with data
          from the first MEPS public use data release (HC-001), only persons
          eligible for Round 2 (i.e., those with a value of 1, 3 or 4 for the File 2
          variable ELIGRND2) should be included in family level analyses.  (The
          analogous File 1 variable is ELIGRND1, which was provided on the first
          release of Round 1 data (HC-001)).
           2.	The variables HSELIG2 and ACCELIG2 indicate whether persons were
          eligible to receive the Health Status (HSELIG2=1) and Access to Care
          questions (ACCELIG2=1), respectively.  Persons who were dead as of
          the Round 2 interview date did not receive the Health Status questions;
          those who were dead or institutionalized as of the Round 2 interview
          date did not receive the Access to Care questions.  When making
          estimates from this file, analysts should take care to exclude persons
          who did not receive the relevant questions.
           3. 	The File 2 variables corresponding to questions AC20 through AC26 of
          the Access Section (CHNGUSC2 through OTHRPRO2) come from
          questions asked at the family level and require the use of the family-level
          weight, WGTRU2T, for estimation when used as the primary analytical
          measure of interest.
           4.	While variables and categories with very small cell sizes have been
          suppressed, some remaining variables will not have adequate numbers of
          observations to support reliable estimation.  Users are urged to use a
          minimum sample size of 100 MEPS participants with positive weights to
          produce survey estimates.  In addition, survey estimates with relative
          standard errors greater than or equal to 0.3 are to be treated as unreliable.
         Following are examples of how to make person-level and family-level estimates using the Access
          to Care data.
           A.	 Person-level estimates.  Example: Making estimates of the total population
          eligible for the Access to Care Section and the percent of the population with no
          usual source of health care.
           1.	Subset File 2 to only those 22,149 persons with positive person level
          weights (WGTSP2T>0).
           2.  	From this file, exclude those persons with ACCELIG2=2.  There are 72
          such people with positive person level weights, leaving 22,077 unweighted
          individuals.
           3.	Apply the weight WGTSP2T to the 22,077 persons to obtain the
          population estimate of 262,654 thousand Americans.
           4.	Next exclude those persons with HAVEUSC2=-7, -8, or -9 (those persons
          for whom a response was refused, don't know, or not ascertained), leaving
          21,979 unweighted individuals with valid data on HAVEUSC2.
           5.	Run a frequency distribution on HAVEUSC2 weighted by WGTSP2T. 
          The results will indicate that 17.6 percent of the population have no usual
          source of health care (HAVEUSC2=2).  This estimate assumes that the
          nonresponders follow the same distribution as the respondents.
           B. 	Family-level estimates.  Example: Making estimates of the total number of
          families and the percent of families experiencing difficulty or delay or not
          receiving needed health care due to any reason.
           1.	Concatenate the variables DUID and FAMID2 into a variable called
          DUIDFAM2.
           2.	Sort the file by DUIDFAM2 and then subset to one record per
          DUIDFAM2 (i.e., retain only the first record for each value of
          DUIDFAM2).  This will result in 9,084 records.
           3.	Apply the weight WGTRU2T to the 9,084 records to obtain the population
          estimate of 110,207 thousand American families.
           4.	Exclude records with OBTAINHC<0.
           5.	Run a frequency distribution on OBTAINH2 weighted by WGTRU2T. 
          The results will indicate that 11.6 percent of American families
          experienced difficulty or delay or did not receive needed health care due to
          any reason (OBTAINH2=1).
           Note: These estimates duplicate numbers which can be found in Weinick RM, Zuvekas
          SH, and Drilea SK.  Access to health care--sources and barriers: 1996.  Rockville (MD):
          Agency for Health Care Policy and Research; 1997. MEPS Research Findings No. 3. 
          AHCPR Pub. No. 98-0001.
         Many of the variables contained on File 2 have missing values for the population of persons with
          positive person level weights (WGTSP2T>0, n=22,149).  In order to produce national estimates,
          some nonresponse adjustment or imputation strategy will need to be implemented by the analyst to
          correct for potential nonresponse bias.
             Return To Table Of 
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        Variance Estimation
         To obtain estimates of variability (such as the standard error of sample estimates or corresponding
          confidence intervals) for estimates based on MEPS HC survey data, one needs to take into account
          the complex sample design of MEPS HC for both person and family level analyses.  Various
          approaches can be used to develop such estimates of variance, using a Taylor series method for
          variance estimation or alternative replication methodologies.  Replicate weights have not been
          developed for the Round 1 or 2 MEPS HC data; the focus here is to identify the variables needed to
          implement a Taylor series estimation approach.
         Using such an approach, variance estimation strata and the variance estimation PSUs within these
          strata must be specified.  The corresponding variables on File 2 are VARSTRT2 and VARPSU2,
          respectively.   Specifying a "with replacement" design in a computer software package such as
          SUDAAN should provide estimated standard errors appropriate for assessing the variability of
          MEPS HC survey estimates.  It should be noted that the number of degrees of freedom associated
          with estimates of variability indicated by such a package may not appropriately reflect the number
          available.  For MEPS HC sample estimates for characteristics generally distributed throughout the
          country (and thus the sample PSUs), a reasonable rule of thumb is that there are roughly 170
          degrees of freedom associated with the corresponding estimates of variance.
             Return To Table Of 
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        D.  Variable-Source Crosswalk
           SURVEY ADMINISTRATION VARIABLES 
        
          
            
              
                | VARIABLE | 
                DESCRIPTION | 
                SOURCE | 
               
              
                | DUID | 
                DU ID | 
                Assigned in Sampling | 
               
              
                | PID | 
                Person Number (PN) | 
                Assigned in Sampling or by CAPI | 
               
              
                | DUPERSID | 
                Sample Person ID (DUID+PID) | 
                Assigned in Sampling | 
               
              
                | FAMID1 | 
                Family Identifier (Student Merged In) - R1 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | FAMID2 | 
                Family Identifier (Student Merged In) - R2 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | FAMID96 | 
                Fam Identifier (Stud Merged In) - 12/31/96 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | FAMIDYR | 
                Annual Family Identifier | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | CPSFAMID | 
                CPS-Like Family Identifier | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | RULETTR1 | 
                RU Letter - R1 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | RULETTR2 | 
                RU Letter - R2 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | RULETR96 | 
                RU Letter As of Dec 31 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | RUSIZE1 | 
                RU Size - R1 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | RUSIZE2 | 
                RU Size - R2 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | RUSIZE96 | 
                RU Size As of Dec 31 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | RUCLASS1 | 
                RU: Standard/New/Student - R1 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | RUCLASS2 | 
                RU: Standard/New/Student - R2 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | RUCLAS96 | 
                RU: Standard/New/Student - 12/31/96 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | FAMSIZE1 | 
                RU Size Including Students - R1 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | FAMSIZE2 | 
                RU Size Including Students - R2 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | FAMSZE96 | 
                RU Size Including Students As of Dec 31 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | FMRS1231 | 
                Member of Responding 12/31 Family | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | FAMS1231 | 
                Family Size of Responding 12/31 Family | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | FAMSZEYR | 
                Size of Responding Annualized Family | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | FAMRFPYR | 
                Reference Person of Annualized Family | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | FCSZ1231 | 
                Fam Size Responding 12/31 CPS Family | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | FCRP1231 | 
                Ref Person Of 12/31 CPS Family | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | INRU1231 | 
                Person Was In RU On 12/31/96 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | INSC1231 | 
                In-scope Status on 12/31/96 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | REGION1 | 
                Census Region - R1 | 
                Assigned in Sampling | 
               
              
                | REGION2 | 
                Census Region - R2 | 
                Assigned in Sampling | 
               
              
                | REGION3 | 
                Census Region - R3 | 
                Assigned in Sampling | 
               
              
                | REGION96 | 
                Census Region As Of Dec 31 | 
                Assigned in Sampling | 
               
              
                | MSA3 | 
                MSA - R3 | 
                Assigned in Sampling | 
               
              
                | MSA96 | 
                MSA As Of Dec 31 | 
                Assigned in Sampling | 
               
              
                | REFPERS1 | 
                Reference Person At Round 1 | 
                RE 42-45 | 
               
              
                | REFPERS2 | 
                Reference Person At Round 2 | 
                RE 42-45 | 
               
              
                | REFPRS96 | 
                Reference Person As Of Dec 31 | 
                RE 42-45 | 
               
              
                | RESP1 | 
                1st Respondent Indicator For Rnd 1 | 
                RE 6, 8 | 
               
              
                | RESP2 | 
                1st Respondent Indicator For Rnd 2 | 
                RE 6, 8 | 
               
              
                | RESP96 | 
                1st Respondent Indicator As Of 12/31/96 | 
                RE 6, 8 | 
               
              
                | PROXY1 | 
                Was Respondent A Proxy In R1 | 
                RE 2 | 
               
              
                | PROXY2 | 
                Was Respondent A Proxy In R2 | 
                RE 2 | 
               
              
                | PROXY96 | 
                Was Respondent A Proxy As Of 12/31/96 | 
                RE 2 | 
               
              
                | BEGREFD1 | 
                R1 Reference Period Begin Date:  Day | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | BEGREFM1 | 
                R1 Reference Period Begin Date:  Month | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | BEGREFY1 | 
                R1 Reference Period Begin Date:  Year | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | ENDREFD1 | 
                Reference Period End Date:  Day - R1 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | ENDREFM1 | 
                Reference Period End Date:  Month  R1 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | ENDREFY1 | 
                Reference Period End Date:  Year - R1 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | BEGREFD2 | 
                R2 Reference Period Begin Date:  Day | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | BEGREFM2 | 
                R2 Reference Period Begin Date:  Month | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | BEGREFY2 | 
                R2 Reference Period Begin Date:  Year | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | ENDREFD2 | 
                Reference Period End Date:  Day - R2 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | ENDREFM2 | 
                Reference Period End Date:  Month  R2 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | ENDREFY2 | 
                Reference Period End Date:  Year - R2 | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | BEGREFD3 | 
                R3 Reference Period Begin Date:  Day | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | BEGREFM3 | 
                R3 Reference Period Begin Date:  Month | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | BEGREFY3 | 
                R3 Reference Period Begin Date:  Year | 
                CAPI Derived | 
               
              
                | ENDRFD96 | 
                1996 Reference Period End Date:  Day | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | ENDRFM96 | 
                1996 Reference Period End Date:  Month | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | ENDRFY96 | 
                1996 Reference Period End Date:  Year | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | KEYNESS | 
                Person Key Status | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | INSCOPE1 | 
                Inscope - R1 | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | INSCOPE2 | 
                Inscope - R2 | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | INSCOP96 | 
                Inscope - R3 Start Through 12/31/96 | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | INSCOPE | 
                Was Person Ever Inscope In 1996 | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | ELIGRND1 | 
                Eligibility - R1 | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | ELIGRND2 | 
                Eligibility - R2 | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | ELGRND96 | 
                Eligibility - R3 Start Through 12/31/96 | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | ELIGIBLE | 
                Was Person Ever Eligible In 1996 | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | PSTATUS1 | 
                Person Disposition Status - R1 | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | PSTATUS2 | 
                Person Disposition Status - R2 | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | PSTATUS3 | 
                Person Disposition Status - R3 | 
                RE Section | 
               
              
                | RURSLT1 | 
                RU Result - R1 | 
                Assigned by CAPI | 
               
              
                | RURSLT2 | 
                RU Result - R2 | 
                Assigned by CAPI | 
               
              
                | RURSLT3 | 
                RU Result - R3 | 
                Assigned by CAPI | 
               
             
          
         
        Return To Table Of Contents
         DEMOGRAPHIC VARIABLES 
        
          
            
              
                | VARIABLE | 
                DESCRIPTION | 
                SOURCE | 
               
              
                | AGE1X | 
                Age - RD1 (Edited/Imputed) | 
                RE 12, 57-66 | 
               
              
                | AGE2X | 
                Age - RD2 (Edited/Imputed) | 
                RE 12, 57-66 | 
               
              
                | AGE96X | 
                Age - 12/31/96 (Edited/Imputed) | 
                RE 12, 57-66 | 
               
              
                | DOBMM | 
                Date of Birth:  Month | 
                RE 12, 57-66 | 
               
              
                | DOBYY | 
                Date of Birth:  Year | 
                RE 12, 57-66 | 
               
              
                | SEX | 
                Sex | 
                RE 12, 57, 61 | 
               
              
                | RACEX | 
                Race (Edited/Imputed) | 
                RE 101, 102 | 
               
              
                | RACETHNX | 
                Race/Ethnicity (Edited/Imputed) | 
                RE 98-102 | 
               
              
                | HISPANX | 
                Hispanic Ethnicity (Edited/Imputed) | 
                RE 98-100 | 
               
              
                | HISPCAT | 
                Specific Hispanic Ethnicity Group | 
                RE 98-100 | 
               
              
                | MARRY1X | 
                Marital Status - RD1 (Edited/Imputed) | 
                RE 13, 97 | 
               
              
                | MARRY2X | 
                Marital Status - RD2 (Edited/Imputed) | 
                RE 13, 97 | 
               
              
                | MARRY96X | 
                Marital Status - 12/31/96 (Edited/Imputed) | 
                RE 13, 97 | 
               
              
                | SPOUSID1 | 
                Spouse ID - RD1 | 
                RE 13, 97 | 
               
              
                | SPOUSID2 | 
                Spouse ID - RD2 | 
                RE 13, 97 | 
               
              
                | SPOUID96 | 
                Spouse ID - 12/31/96 | 
                RE 13, 97 | 
               
              
                | SPOUSIN1 | 
                Marital Status W/ Spouse Present - RD1 | 
                RE 13, 97 | 
               
              
                | SPOUSIN2 | 
                Marital Status W/ Spouse Present - RD2 | 
                RE 13, 97 | 
               
              
                | SPOUIN96 | 
                Marital Status W/Spouse Present - 12/31/96 | 
                RE 13, 97 | 
               
              
                | EDUCYR1 | 
                Completed Years of Education - RD1 | 
                RE 103-105 | 
               
              
                | EDUCYR2 | 
                Completed Years of Education - RD2 | 
                RE 103-105 | 
               
              
                | EDUCYR96 | 
                Completed Years of Education - 12/31/96 | 
                RE 103-105 | 
               
              
                | HIGHDEG1 | 
                Highest Degree - RD1 | 
                RE 103-105 | 
               
              
                | HIGHDEG2 | 
                Highest Degree - RD2 | 
                RE 103-105 | 
               
              
                | HIDEG96 | 
                Highest Degree - 12/31/96 | 
                RE 103-105 | 
               
              
                | FTSTUD1X | 
                Student Status If Ages 17-23 - Round 1 | 
                RE 11A, 106-108 | 
               
              
                | FTSTUD2X | 
                Student Status If Ages 17-23 - Round 2 | 
                RE 11A, 106-108 | 
               
              
                | FTSTU96X | 
                Student Status If Ages 17-23 - 12/31/96 | 
                RE 11A, 106-108 | 
               
              
                | ACTDUTY1 | 
                Military Full-Time Active Duty - RD1 | 
                RE14, 96A | 
               
              
                | ACTDUTY2 | 
                Military Full-Time Active Duty - RD2 | 
                RE 14, 96B1 | 
               
              
                | DIDSERVE | 
                Ever Served In Armed Forces | 
                RE 18, 95 | 
               
              
                | VETPVIET | 
                Served In Post-Vietnam Era | 
                RE 96 | 
               
              
                | VETVIET | 
                Served In Vietnam War Era | 
                RE 96 | 
               
              
                | VETKOR | 
                Served In Korean War Era | 
                RE 96 | 
               
              
                | VETWW | 
                Served In WWI Or WW2 Era | 
                RE 96 | 
               
              
                | VETOTH | 
                Served In Other Period | 
                RE 96 | 
               
              
                | REFREL1X | 
                Relation To Ref Pers - RD 1 (Edited/Imputed) | 
                RE 76-77 | 
               
              
                | REFREL2X | 
                Relation To Ref Pers - RD 2 (Edited/Imputed) | 
                RE 76-77 | 
               
              
                | RFREL96X | 
                Relation To Ref Pers 12/31/96 (Edit/Imp) | 
                RE 76-77 | 
               
              
                | MOMPID1X | 
                PID Of Person's Mom (Edited/Imputed) - RD1 | 
                RE 76-77  | 
               
              
                | DADPID1X | 
                PID Of Person's Dad (Edited/Imputed) - RD 1 | 
                RE 76-77 | 
               
              
                | MOMPID2X | 
                PID Of Person's Mom (Edited/Imputed) - RD2 | 
                RE 76-77 | 
               
              
                | DADPID2X | 
                PID Of Person's Dad (Edited/Imputed) - RD 2 | 
                RE 76-77 | 
               
             
          
         
        Return To Table Of Contents
         INCOME VARIABLES 
        
          
           
              
                | VARIABLE | 
                DESCRIPTION | 
                SOURCE | 
               
              
                | SSIDISAB | 
                SSI Receipt Due to Disability | 
                IN 39 | 
               
              
                | AFDC | 
                Did Pres's Check Include AFDC or ADC | 
                IN 44 | 
               
              
                | FILEDITR | 
                Has Person Filed a Fed Income Tax Return | 
                IN 2 | 
               
              
                | WILLFILE | 
                Will Person File Fed Income Tax Return | 
                IN 3 | 
               
              
                | FILESTAT | 
                Person's Filing Status | 
                IN 4  | 
               
              
                | FILER | 
                Primary or Secondary Filer | 
                IN 4 | 
               
              
                | JNTINRU | 
                Joint Filer's Membership in ru | 
                IN 5 | 
               
              
                | JOINTPID | 
                Pid of Secondary Filer | 
                IN 5 | 
               
              
                | CLAIMDEP | 
                Did/will Pers Claim Dependents on Return | 
                IN 6 | 
               
              
                | DEPENDNT | 
                Person Is Flagged a Dependant | 
                IN 7 | 
               
              
                | DEPINRU | 
                Dependents In/out of RU | 
                IN 7 | 
               
              
                | DEPOUTSD | 
                How Many Dependents Live Outside RU | 
                IN 8 | 
               
              
                | TAXFORM | 
                Tax Form Person Will File | 
                IN 9 | 
               
              
                | DEDUCTNS | 
                Itemize or Standard Deduction  | 
                IN 10 | 
               
              
                | ITMEDEXP | 
                Will Person Itemize Medical Expense | 
                IN 11 | 
               
              
                | MDEXPAMT | 
                Total Amount for Medical Expenses | 
                IN 12 | 
               
              
                | NETMDDED | 
                Person's Net Medical Expense Deduction | 
                IN 13 | 
               
              
                | TOTDED | 
                Total of All Itemized Deductions | 
                IN 14 | 
               
              
                | CLMHIP | 
                Did/will Pers Deduct Hlth Insur Prem | 
                IN 15 | 
               
              
                | ELDISCR | 
                Did/will Pers Receive Elderly/disab Cred | 
                IN 16 | 
               
              
                | EICREDIT  | 
                Did/will Pers Receive Earned Inc Credit | 
                IN 17 | 
               
              
                | UNEMTAX | 
                Taxable Percentage of Unemployment | 
                IN 30 | 
               
              
                | INTRTAX | 
                Taxable Percentage of Interest | 
                IN 19 | 
               
              
                | SSECTAX | 
                Taxable Percentage of Social Security | 
                IN 31 | 
               
              
                | IRASTAX | 
                Taxable Percentage of IRA Income | 
                IN 25 | 
               
              
                | FOODSTMP | 
                Did Anyone Purchase Food Stamps | 
                IN 55 | 
               
              
                | FOODMNTH | 
                Number of Food Stamps Purchased | 
                IN 56 | 
               
              
                | FOODCOST | 
                Amount Family Paid for Food Stamps | 
                IN 57 | 
               
              
                | FOODVALU | 
                Monthly Value of Food Stamps | 
                IN 58 | 
               
              
                | TTLPNX | 
                Person's Total Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | POVCAT | 
                Family Income as Percent of Poverty Line | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | WAGEPNX | 
                Person's Wage Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | WAGEIMP | 
                WAGEPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | BUSNPNX | 
                Person's Business Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | BUSNIMP | 
                BUSNPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | FARMPNX | 
                Person's Farm Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | FARMIMP | 
                FARMPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | INTRPNX | 
                Person's Interest Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | INTRIMP | 
                INTRPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | DIVDPNX | 
                Person's Dividend Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | DIVDIMP | 
                DIVDPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | ALIMPNX | 
                Person's Alimony Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | ALIMIMP | 
                ALIMPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | TRSTPNX | 
                Person's Trust/rent Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | TRSTIMP | 
                TRSTPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | PENSPNX | 
                Person's Pension Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | PENSIMP | 
                PENSPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | IRASPNX | 
                Person's IRA Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | IRASIMP | 
                IRASPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | SSECPNX | 
                Person's Social Security Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | SSECIMP | 
                SSECPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | UNEMPNX | 
                Person's Unemployment Comp Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | UNEMIMP | 
                UNEMPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | WCMPPNX | 
                Person's Workman's Compensation | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | WCMPIMP | 
                WCMPPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | VETSPNX | 
                Person's Veteran's Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | VETSIMP | 
                VETSPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | CASHPNX | 
                Person's Other Regular Cash Contrib | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | CASHIMP | 
                CASHPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | OTHRPNX | 
                Person's Other Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | OTHRIMP | 
                OTHRPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | CHLDPNX | 
                Person's Child Support | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | CHLDIMP | 
                Chldpn Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | PUBPNX | 
                Person's Public Assistance | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | PUBIMP | 
                PUBPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | SSIPNX | 
                Person's SSI | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | SSIIMP | 
                SSIPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | SALEPNX | 
                Person's Sales Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | SALEIMP | 
                SALEPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | REFDPNX | 
                Person's Refund Income | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | REFDIMP | 
                REFDPN Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
             
          
         
        
            Return To Table Of 
Contents 
    
        EMPLOYMENT VARIABLES 
        
          
            
              
                | VARIABLE | 
                DESCRIPTION | 
                SOURCE | 
               
              
                | EMST1 | 
                Employment Status RD1 | 
                EM 1-3 | 
               
              
                | EMPST2 | 
                Employment Status RD 2 | 
                EM 1-3; RJ 1,6 | 
               
              
                | EMPST96 | 
                Employment Status  December 31, 1996 | 
                EM 1-3; RJ 1, 6; Constructed | 
               
              
                | NWK1 | 
                Reason Not Working RD 1 | 
                EM1-3,101-102,126-127,132-133,138-139,141,141.0V | 
               
              
                | NWK2 | 
                Reason Not Working RD2 | 
                EM1-3,101-102,126-127,132-133,138-139,141,141.0V;RJ01,10 | 
               
              
                | NWK96 | 
                Reason Not Working on !2/31/96 | 
                EM1-3,101-102,126-127,132-133,138-139,141,141.0V;RJ01,10 | 
               
              
                | SELFCM1 | 
                Self-Employed RD 1 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51 | 
               
              
                | SELFCM2 | 
                Self-Employed RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51; RJ 01 | 
               
              
                | SELFCM96 | 
                Self-Employed 12/31/96 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51; RJ 01 | 
               
              
                | PAYDR1 | 
                Paid Leave to Visit DR RD 1 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 107-108 | 
               
              
                | PAYDR2 | 
                Paid Leave to Visit DR RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 107-108; 
                RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | PAYDR96 | 
                Paid Leave to Visit DR 12/31/96 CM J | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 107-108;RJ01,02  | 
               
              
                | SICPAY1 | 
                Paid Sick Leave RD 1 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 107 | 
               
              
                | SICPAY2 | 
                Paid Sick Leave RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 107; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | SICPAY96 | 
                Paid Sick Leave 12/31/96 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 107; RJ01, 02 | 
               
              
                | PAYVAC1 | 
                Paid Vacation at RD 1 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 109 | 
               
              
                | PAYVAC2 | 
                Paid Vacation at RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 109; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | PAYVAC96 | 
                Paid Vacation at 12/31/96  CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 109; RJ01, 02 | 
               
              
                | RETPLN1 | 
                Pension Plan RD 1 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 110 | 
               
              
                | RETPLN2 | 
                Pension Plan RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 110; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | RETPLN96 | 
                Pension Plan 12/31/96 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 110; RJ01, 02 | 
               
              
                | MORE1 | 
                RD 1 CM Job Firm Has More Than 1 Locat | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 93 | 
               
              
                | MORE2 | 
                RD 2 CM Job Firm Has More Than 1 Locat | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 93; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | MORE96 | 
                12/31/96 CM Job Firm Has More Than 1
                  Locat | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 93; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | JOBORG1 | 
                Private (Profit, Nonprofit) Gov RD 1 CMJ | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 96 | 
               
              
                | JOBORG2 | 
                Private (Profit, Nonprofit) Gov RD 2 CMJ | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 96; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | JOBORG96 | 
                Private (Profit, Nonprofit) Gov12/31/96 CMJ  | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 96; RJ01,02 | 
               
              
                | BSNTY1 | 
                Sole Prop, Partner, Corp RD 1 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 94-95 | 
               
              
                | BSNTY2 | 
                Sole Prop, Partner, Corp RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 94-95; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | BSNTY96 | 
                Sole Prop, Partner, Corp 12/31/96 CM J | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 94-95; RJ01,02 | 
               
              
                | HRWG1X | 
                Hourly Wage RD 1 CM Job | 
                EW 5, 7, 11-13, 17-18, 24; EM
                  104, 111 | 
               
              
                | HRWGIM1 | 
                HRWG1X Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed. | 
               
              
                | HRHOW1 | 
                How Hourly Wage Was Calculated R1 | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 104, 111; EW 1-24  | 
               
              
                | HRWG2X | 
                Hourly Wage RD 2 CM Job | 
                EW 5, 7, 11-13, 17-18, 24; EM
                  104,111 | 
               
              
                | HRWGIM2 | 
                HRWG2X Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | HRHOW2 | 
                How Hourly Wage Was Calculated RD 2 | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 104, 111; EW 1-24  | 
               
              
                | HRWG96X | 
                Hourly Wage 12/31/96 CM Job | 
                EW 5, 7, 11-13, 17-18, 24; EM
                  104, 111 | 
               
              
                | HRWGIM96 | 
                HRWG96X Imputation Flag | 
                Constructed. | 
               
              
                | HRHOW96 | 
                How Hourly Wage Was Calculated R1 | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 104, 111; EW 1-24  | 
               
              
                | HELD1X | 
                Health Insurance Held From RD 1 CM Job  | 
                EM and HX Sections | 
               
              
                | HELD2X | 
                Health Insurance Held from RD 2 CM Job  | 
                EM and HX Sections | 
               
              
                | HELD96X | 
                Health Insurance Held From 12/31/96 CMJob  | 
                EM and HX Sections | 
               
              
                | OFFER1X | 
                Health Insurance Offered from RD 1 CMJ | 
                EM and HX Sections | 
               
              
                | OFFER2X | 
                Health Insurance Offered from RD 2 CMJ | 
                EM and HX Sections | 
               
              
                | OFFER96X | 
                Health Insurance Offered at 12/31/96  CMJob | 
                EM and HX Sections | 
               
              
                | CHOIC1 | 
                Choice of Health Plans from RD 1 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 96, 113-115, 124 | 
               
              
                | CHOIC2 | 
                Choice of Health Plans from RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 96, 113-115, 124; RJ
                  8 | 
               
              
                | CHOIC96 | 
                Choice of Health Plans from 12/31/96 CM J | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 96, 113-115, 124;
                  RJ8 | 
               
              
                | DISVW1X | 
                Disavowed Health Insurance at RD 1 CMJob | 
                EM and HX Sections | 
               
              
                | DISVW2X | 
                Disavowed Health Insurance at RD 2 CMJob | 
                EM and HX Sections | 
               
              
                | DISVW96X | 
                Disavowed Health Insurance at 12/3196 CMJ | 
                EM and HX Sections | 
               
              
                | HOUR1 | 
                Hours Per Week RD 1 CM Job  | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 104-105, 111; EW 17 | 
               
              
                | HOUR2 | 
                Hours Per Week RD 2 CM Job  | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 104, 105, 111; EW
                  17; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | HOUR96 | 
                Hours Per Week 12/31/96 CM Job  | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 104, 105, 111; EW
                  17; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | NUMEMP1 | 
                Est Size RD 1 CM Job | 
                EM 91-92, 124 | 
               
              
                | NUMEMP2 | 
                Est Size RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM 91-92, 124; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | NUMEMP96 | 
                Est Size at 12/31/96  CM Job | 
                EM 91-92, 124; RJ1 | 
               
              
                | CIND1 | 
                Condensed Industry Code RD 1 CM Job | 
                EM 97-100; RJ 1; Constructed | 
               
              
                | CIND2 | 
                Condensed Industry Code RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM 97-100; RJ 1; Constructed | 
               
              
                | CIND96 | 
                Condensed Industry Code at 12/31/96 CMJ | 
                EM 97-100; RJ 1; Constructed | 
               
              
                | COCCP1 | 
                Condensed Occupation Code Rd 1 CM Job | 
                EM99,EM100; Constructed | 
               
              
                | COCCP2 | 
                Condensed Occupation Code Rd 2 CM Job | 
                EM99,EM100; Constructed | 
               
              
                | COCCP96 | 
                Condensed Occupation Code at 12/31/96 
                  CMJ | 
                EM99,EM100; Constructed | 
               
              
                | UNION1 | 
                Union Status at RD 1 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 96, 116 | 
               
              
                | UNION2 | 
                Union Status at RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 96, 116; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | UNION96 | 
                Union Status at 12/31/96 CM Job | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 96, 116; RJ 1 | 
               
              
                | SHFTWK1 | 
                Irregular Work Shift RD 1 CMJ | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 105, 111 | 
               
              
                | SHFTWK2 | 
                Irregular Work Shift RD 2 CMJ | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 105, 111; RJ 1  | 
               
              
                | SHFTWK96 | 
                Irregular Work Shift12/31/96 CMJ | 
                EM 1-3, 51, 105, 111; RJ01,02 | 
               
              
                | BGNWK1 | 
                Usual Start Time of RD1 CM Job | 
                EM105,105A, 105A0V | 
               
              
                | BGNWK2 | 
                Usual Start Time of RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM105,105A, 105A0V; RJ01,02 | 
               
              
                | BGNWK96 | 
                Usual Start Time of 12/31/96 CM Job | 
                EM105,105A, 105A0V; R01,02 | 
               
              
                | ENDWK1 | 
                Usual End Time of RD 1 CM Job | 
                EM105,105A, 105A0V | 
               
              
                | ENDWK2 | 
                Usual End Time of RD 2 CM Job | 
                EM105,105A, 105A0V; RJ01, 02 | 
               
              
                | ENDWK96 | 
                Usual End Time of 12/31/96 CM Job | 
                EM105,105A, 105A0V; RJ01,02 | 
               
              
                | STJBMM1 | 
                Month Started RD1 CM Job | 
                EM10,10.0V,10.0V2 | 
               
              
                | STJBDD1 | 
                Day Started RD1 CM Job | 
                EM10, 10.0V,10.0V2 | 
               
              
                | STJBYY1 | 
                Year Started RD1 CM Job | 
                EM10,10.0V,10.0V2 | 
               
              
                | STJBMM2 | 
                Month Started RD2 CM Job | 
                EM10,10.0V,10.0V2;RJ01,01A | 
               
              
                | STJBDD2 | 
                Day Started RD2 CM Job | 
                EM10, 10.0V,10.0V2;RJ01,01A | 
               
              
                | STJBYY2 | 
                Year Started RD2 CM Job | 
                EM10,10.0V,10.0V2;RJ01,01A | 
               
              
                | STJBMM96 | 
                Month Started 12/31/96  CM Job | 
                EM10,10.0V,10.0V2;RJ01,01A | 
               
              
                | STJBDD96 | 
                Day Started 12/31/96  CM Job | 
                EM10, 10.0V,10.0V2;RJ01,01A | 
               
              
                | STJBYY96 | 
                Year Started 12/31/96 CM Job | 
                EM10,10.0V,10.0V2;RJ01,01A | 
               
              
                | EVRET96 | 
                Ever Retired as of 12/31/96 | 
                EM1-3,101-102,126-127,132-133,138-139,141,141.0V;RJ01,10 | 
               
              
                | EVRWRK | 
                Ever Worked for Pay as of 12/31/96 | 
                EM 1-4, 51; RJ 1,6; Constructed | 
               
              
                | MORJOB1 | 
                Has More Than One Job RD 1 | 
                EM 1-4, 51 | 
               
              
                | MORJOB2 | 
                Has More Than One Job RD 2 | 
                EM 1-4, 51; RJ 1,6 | 
               
              
                | MORJOB96 | 
                Has More Than One Job on December 31,
                  1996 | 
                EM 1-4, 51; RJ 1,6; Constructed | 
               
              
                | CHNGJ12 | 
                Changed RD 1 CMJ in RD 2 | 
                RJ01,01A | 
               
              
                | CHNGJ231 | 
                Changed Rd 2 CMJ by 12/31/96 | 
                RJ01,01A | 
               
              
                | YCHJB12 | 
                Why Changed R1 CMJ in RD 2 | 
                RJ10, 10.0V | 
               
              
                | YCHJB231 | 
                Why Changed RD2 CMJ by 12/31/96 | 
                RJ09,10,10.0V | 
               
             
          
         
        Return To Table Of Contents
         HEALTH INSURANCE VARIABLES 
        
          
           
              
                | VARIABLE | 
                DESCRIPTION | 
                SOURCE | 
               
              
                | CHMPNOW1 | 
                PID Cov By CHAMPUS/VA - RD 1 Int Date | 
                RE 14, 96A; HX 13;
                  HQ 1-2; HX 12 (RU
                  Level) | 
               
              
                | MCAID1 | 
                PID Covered By MEDICAID - RD 1 | 
                HX 10, 11 (RU level) | 
               
              
                | MCAID1X | 
                PID Covered By MEDICAID - RD 1 (Edited) | 
                HX 11,15,18-19, 41-43, 45 HX 10,14,16 (RU
                  Level)  | 
               
              
                | OTPUBA1 | 
                PID Cov By/Pays Oth Gov MCAID HMO - RD 1 | 
                HX 15, 41-43, 45 14 (RU Level)  | 
               
              
                | OTPUBB1 | 
                PID Cov By Oth Pub Not MCAID HMO - RD 1 | 
                HX 15, 41-43, 14(RU
                  level) | 
               
              
                | STATPRG1 | 
                PID Cov Frm State-Specific Prog - RD 1 | 
                HX 17, 19, 16(RU
                  level) | 
               
              
                | PUBLIC1 | 
                PID Cov Frm Public Ins Plan - RD 1 | 
                MCAID1X,
                  MCARNW1X,
                  CHMPNOW1,
                  OTPUBA1, OTPUBB1 | 
               
              
                | OTGOVPY1 | 
                Any Govt Pays Part MCAID HMO Prem - RD 1 | 
                HX 41-43, 47 | 
               
              
                | MCARNOW1 | 
                PID Cov By MEDICARE - RD 1 Int Date | 
                HX 6-7 | 
               
              
                | MCARNW1X | 
                PID Cov By MEDICARE - RD 1 Int Date (Edited) | 
                HX 7, 9, 11, 15
                  (PRIV1 and HX48); HX 6, 10, 14 (RU
                  level)  | 
               
              
                | PRIV1 | 
                PID Has Priv Hlth Ins Coverage - RD 1 | 
                PRIVOG1, PRIVDK1,
                  PRIVEG1, PRIVU1,
                  PRIVS1, PRIVOUT1, PRIVNG1  | 
               
              
                | PRIVEG1 | 
                PID Has Cov Frm Emp Group Plan - RD 1 | 
                HX 2, 23, 48; HP 9, 11,
                  15, 16; HELDCM1X
                  (PUF 1), HELDNM1X
                  (PUF 1), EM 117  | 
               
              
                | PRIVU1 | 
                PID Has Cov From Union Group Plan - RD 1 | 
                HX 2, 3, 23, 48; HP 9,
                  11, 15, 16;
                  HELDCM1X (PUF 1),
                  HELDNM1X (PUF 1), EM 117  | 
               
              
                | PRIVS1 | 
                PID Has Cov Frm Self-Emp Plan - RD 1 | 
                HX 3, 48; EM 17-18,
                  26-27, 39-40, 52, 53,
                  69, 70, 81, 82, 91-92;
                  HP 9, 15-16 | 
               
              
                | PRIVOG1 | 
                PID Has Cov Frm Oth Group Plan - RD 1 | 
                HX 23, 48; HP 1, 2, 11,
                  15-16 | 
               
              
                | PRIVNG1 | 
                PID Has Cov Frm Nongroup Plan - RD 1 | 
                HX 23, 48; HP 11, 15-16 | 
               
              
                | PRGVPYA1 | 
                Non-Emp Priv Cov Feds Pay Part - RD 1 | 
                HX 23, 48, 61,63;
                  HP11 | 
               
              
                | PRGVPYB1 | 
                Non-Emp Priv Cov Oth Gov Pays Part - RD 1 | 
                HX 23, 48, 61,63;
                  HP11 | 
               
              
                | PRIVDK1 | 
                PID Has Cov Frm Priv DK Plan - RD 1 | 
                HX 23, 48; HP 11, 15-16 | 
               
              
                | PRIVOUT1 | 
                PID Has Cov Frm Holder Outside RU - RD 1 | 
                HX 23, 48; HP 15-16 | 
               
              
                | HPRIV1 | 
                PID Is Holder Of Priv Ins Plan - RD 1 | 
                HPRIVEG1,
                  HPRIVS1, HPRIVU1,
                  HPRIVOG1,
                  HPRIVNG1,
                  HRPIVDK1 | 
               
              
                | HPRIVEG1 | 
                PID Is Holder Of Emp Group Plan - RD 1 | 
                PRIVEG1; HP 9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPRIVU1 | 
                PID Is Holder of Union Grp Plan - RD 1 | 
                PRIVU1; HP 9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPRIVS1 | 
                PID Is Holder Of Self-Emp Ins - RD 1 | 
                PRIVS1; HP 9 | 
               
              
                | HPRIVOG1 | 
                PID Is Holder Of Oth Group Plan - RD 1 | 
                PRIVOG1; HP 11 | 
               
              
                | HPRIVNG1 | 
                PID Is Holder Of Nongroup Plan - RD 1 | 
                PRIVNG1; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPRIVDK1 | 
                PID Is Holder Of Priv DK Plan - RD 1 | 
                PRIVDK1; HP 11 | 
               
              
                | UPRHMO1 | 
                Updated:  PID Enrolled in Prv HMO - RD 1  | 
                HX03, HX23,
                  HX49_02.TYPE,
                  HX51_02.TYPE,
                  HX54_02.TYPE,
                  MC01 | 
               
              
                | UPRMNC1 | 
                Updated:  PID Enrolled in Prv Mnged Care - RD 1 | 
                MC02 | 
               
              
                | UPUBHMO1 | 
                Updated:  PID Enrolled in Public HMO - RD 1 | 
                HX41, HX42 | 
               
              
                | UPUBMNC1 | 
                Updated:  PID Enrolled in Public Mnged Care - RD 1 | 
                HX43 | 
               
              
                | MCRHMO1 | 
                PID Enrolled in Medicare HMO - RD 1  | 
                HX31, HX32, HX32A | 
               
              
                | INSURED1  | 
                PID Is Insured - RD 1  | 
                PUBLIC1, PRIV1 | 
               
              
                | CHJA96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In Jan96 (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96A, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | CHFE96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In Feb96 (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96A, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | CHMA96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In Mar96 (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96A, 96B1, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | CHAP96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In Apr96 (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96A, 96B1, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | CHMY96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In May96 (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96A, 96B1, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | CHJU96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In Jun96  (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96A, 96B1, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | CHJL96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In Jul96 (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96A, 96B1, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | CHAU96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In Aug96 (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96B1, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | CHSE96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In Sep96 (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96B1, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | CHOC96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In Oct96 (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96B1, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | CHNO96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In Nov96 (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96B1, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | CHDE96X | 
                Covered By Champus/Champva In Dec96 (Ed) | 
                HX12, 13, PR19-22,
                  HQ Section, RE14,
                  96B1, and age at
                  interview date | 
               
              
                | MCRJA96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In Jan96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCRFE96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In Feb96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCRMA96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In Mar96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCRAP96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In Apr96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCRMY96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In May96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCRJU96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In Jun96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCRJL96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In Jul96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCRAU96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In Aug96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCRSE96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In Sept96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCROC96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In Oct96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCRNO96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In Nov96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCRDE96 | 
                Covered By Medicare In Dec96 | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV | 
               
              
                | MCRJA96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In Jan96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for
                  additional edit
                  specifications | 
               
              
                | MCRFE96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In Feb96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for
                  additional edit
                  specifications | 
               
              
                | MCRMA96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In Mar96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for
                  additional edit
                  specifications | 
               
              
                | MCRAP96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In Apr96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for
                  additional edit
                  specifications | 
               
              
                | MCRMY96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In May96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for
                  additional edit
                  specifications | 
               
              
                | MCRJU96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In Jun96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for
                  additional edit
                  specifications | 
               
              
                | MCRJL96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In Jul96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for | 
               
              
                | MCRAU96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In Aug96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for
                  additional edit
                  specifications | 
               
              
                | MCRSE96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In Spe96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for
                  additional edit
                  specifications | 
               
              
                | MCROC96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In Oct96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for
                  additional edit
                  specifications | 
               
              
                | MCRNO96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In Nov96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for
                  additional edit
                  specifications | 
               
              
                | MCRDE96X | 
                Covered By Medicare In Dec96 (Ed) | 
                HX05-07, 27, 29,
                  29OV, see
                  documentation,
                  section 2.5.8, for
                  additional edit
                  specifications | 
               
              
                | MCDJA96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Jan96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDFE96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Feb96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDMA96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Mar96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDAP96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Apr96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDMY96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In May96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDJU96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Jun96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDJL96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Jul96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDAU96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Aug96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDSE96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Sept96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDOC96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Oct96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDNO96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Nov96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDDE96 | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Dec96 | 
                HX10-11, PR07-10
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | MCDJA96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Jan96 (Ed) | 
                MCDJA96, HX14-16,
                  18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | MCDFE96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Feb96 (Ed) | 
                MCDFE96, HX14-16,
                  18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | MCDMA96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Mar96 (Ed) | 
                MCDMA96, HX14-16, 18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | MCDAP96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Apr96  (Ed) | 
                MCDAP96, HX14-16,
                  18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | MCDMY96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In May96 (Ed) | 
                MCDMY96, HX14-16, 18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | MCDJU96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Jun96 (Ed) | 
                MCDJU96, HX14-16,
                  18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | MCDJL96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Jul96 (Ed) | 
                MCDJL96, HX14-16,
                  18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | MCDAU96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Aug96 (Ed) | 
                MCDAU96, HX14-16, 18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | MCDSE96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Sep96 (Ed) | 
                MCDSE96, HX14-16,
                  18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | MCDOC96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Oct96 (Ed) | 
                MCDOC96, HX14-16,
                  18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | MCDNO96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Nov96 (Ed) | 
                MCDNO96, HX14-16, 18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | MCDDE96X | 
                Covered By Medicaid In Dec96 (Ed) | 
                MCDDE96, HX14-16,
                  18-19, 41-43, 45,
                  PR11-14, 23-32, 39-42 | 
               
              
                | OPAJA96 | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In Jan96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPAFE96  | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In Feb96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPAMA96 | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In Mar96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPAAP96 | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In Apr96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPAMY96 | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In May96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPAJU96 | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In Jun96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPAJL96 | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In Jul96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPAAU96 | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In Aug96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPASE96 | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In Sep96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPAOC96 | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In Oct96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPANO96 | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In Nov96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPADE96 | 
                Cov By Other Public A Ins In Dec96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-45, PR
                  23-32 and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | OPBJA96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B Ins In Jan96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | OPBFE96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B Ins In Feb96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | OPBMA96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B Ins In Mar96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | OPBAP96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B Ins In Apr96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | OPBMY96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B Ins In May96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | OPBJU96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B Ins In Jun96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | OPBJL96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B Ins In Jul96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | OPBAU96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B Ins In Aug96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | OPBSE96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B Ins In Sep96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | OPBOC96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B Ins In Oct96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | OPBNO96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B  Ins In Nov96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | OPBDE96 | 
                Cov By Other Public B Ins In Dec96 | 
                HX14-15, 41-43,
                  PR23-30 and HQ
                  Section | 
               
              
                | STAJA96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In Jan96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | STAFE96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In Feb96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | STAMA96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In Mar96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | STAAP96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In Apr96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | STAMY96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In May96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | STAJU96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In Jun96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | STAJL96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In Jul96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | STAAU96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In Aug96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | STASE96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In Sep96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | STAOC96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In Oct96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | STANO96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In Nov96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | STADE96 | 
                Covered By Other State Prog In Dec96 | 
                HX16-19, PR35-38
                  and HQ Section | 
               
              
                | PUBJA96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In Jan96 (Ed) | 
                CHJA96X,
                  MCRJA96X, MCDJA96X, OPAJA96, OPBJA96  | 
               
              
                | PUBFE96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In Feb96 (Ed) | 
                CHFE96X,
                  MCRFE96X, MCDFE96X, OPAFE96, OPBFE96  | 
               
              
                | PUBMA96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In Mar96  (Ed) | 
                CHMA96X
                  MCRMA96X, MCDMA96X, OPAMA96,
                  OPBMA96  | 
               
              
                | PUBAP96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In Apr96 (Ed) | 
                CHAP96X,
                  MCRAP96X, MCDAP96X, OPAAP96, OPBAP96  | 
               
              
                | PUBMY96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In May96 (Ed) | 
                CHMY96X,
                  MCRMY96X, MCDMY96X, OPAMY96,
                  OPBMY96  | 
               
              
                | PUBJU96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In Jun96 (Ed) | 
                CHJU96X,
                  MCRJU96X, MCDJU96X, OPAJU96, OPBJU96  | 
               
              
                | PUBJL96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In Jul96 (Ed) | 
                CHJL96X,
                  MCRJL96X, MCDJL96X, OPAJL96, OPBJL96  | 
               
              
                | PUBAU96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In Aug96 (Ed) | 
                CHAU96X,
                  MCRAUU6X, MCDAU96X, OPAAU96,
                  OPBAU96  | 
               
              
                | PUBSE96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In Sep96 (Ed) | 
                CHSE96X,
                  MCRSE96X, MCDSE96X, OPASE96, OPBSE96  | 
               
              
                | PUBOC96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In Oct96 (Ed) | 
                CHOC96X,
                  MCROC96X, MCDOC96X, OPAOC96,
                  OPBOC96  | 
               
              
                | PUBNO96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In Nov96 (Ed) | 
                CHNO96X,
                  MCRNO96X, MCDNO96X,  OPANO96,
                  OPBNO96 | 
               
              
                | PUBDE96X | 
                Covrd By Any Public Ins In Dec96 (Ed) | 
                CHDE96X,
                  MCRDE96X, MCDDE96X, OPADE96, OPBDE96  | 
               
              
                | PEGJA96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In Jan96 | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PEGFE96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In Feb96  | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PEGMA96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In Mar96  | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PEGAP96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In Apr96  | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PEGMY96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In  May96  | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PEGJU96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In Jun96 | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PEGJL96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In Jul96 | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PEGAU96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In Aug96 | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PEGSE96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In Sep96 | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PEGOC96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In Oct96 | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PEGNO96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In Nov96 | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PEGDE96 | 
                Covered By Empl Union Ins In Dec96 | 
                HX2-4, 21-24, 48; HP,
                  OE, HQ,  EM, RJ 
                  Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKJA96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Jan96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKFE96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Feb96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKMA96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Mar96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKAP96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Apr96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKMY96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) May96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKJU96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Jun96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKJL96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Jul96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKAU96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Aug96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKSE96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Sep96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKOC96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Oct96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKNO96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Nov96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PDKDE96 | 
                Covrd By Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Dec96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGJA96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In Jan96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGFE96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In Feb96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGMA96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In Mar96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGAP96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In Apr96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGMY96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In May96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGJU96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In Jun96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGJL96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In Jul96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGAU96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In Aug96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGSE96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In Sep96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGOC96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In Oct96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGNO96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In Nov96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PNGDE96 | 
                Covered By Nongroup Ins In Dec96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGJA96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In Jan96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGFE96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In Feb96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGMA96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In Mar96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGAP96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In Apr96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGMY96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In May96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGJU96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In Jun96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGJL96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In Jul96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGAU96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In Aug96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGSE96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In Sep96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGOC96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In Oct96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGNO96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In Nov96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POGDE96 | 
                Covered By Other Group Ins In Dec96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections  | 
               
              
                | PRSJA96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In Jan96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections  | 
               
              
                | PRSFE96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In Feb96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections | 
               
              
                | PRSMA96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In Mar96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections | 
               
              
                | PRSAP96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In Apr96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections | 
               
              
                | PRSMY96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In May96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections | 
               
              
                | PRSJU96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In Jun96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections | 
               
              
                | PRSJL96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In Jul96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections | 
               
              
                | PRSAU96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In Aug96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections | 
               
              
                | PRSSE96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In Sep96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections | 
               
              
                | PRSOC96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In Oct96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections | 
               
              
                | PRSNO96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In Nov96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections | 
               
              
                | PRSDE96 | 
                Covered By Self-Emp-1 Ins In Dec96 | 
                HX3, 4, 48, HQ, OE,
                  RJ and EM sections | 
               
              
                | POUJA96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In Jan96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POUFE96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In Feb96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POUMA96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In Mar96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POUAP96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In Apr96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POUMY96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In May96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POUJU96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In Jun96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POUJL96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In Jul96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POUAU96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In Aug96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POUSE96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In Sep96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POUOC96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In Oct96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POUNO96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In Nov96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | POUDE96 | 
                Covered By Holder Outside Of Ru In Dec96 | 
                HX21-24, 48, HP, OE,
                  and HQ Sections | 
               
              
                | PRIJA96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In Jan96 | 
                POGJA96, PDKJA96,
                  PEGJA96,  PRSJA96,
                  POUJA96, PNGJA96 | 
               
              
                | PRIFE96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In Feb96 | 
                POGFE96, PDKFE96,
                  PEGFE96,  PRSFE96,
                  POUFE96, PNGFE96 | 
               
              
                | PRIMA96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In Mar96 | 
                POGMA96,
                  PDKMA96,
                  PEGMA96, 
                  PRSMA96,
                  POUMA96,
                  PNGMA96 | 
               
              
                | PRIAP96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In Apr96 | 
                POGAP96,
                  PDKAP96,
                  PEGAP96, 
                  PRSAP96, POUAP96,
                  PNGAP96 | 
               
              
                | PRIMY96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In May96 | 
                POGMY96,
                  PDKMY96,
                  PEGMY96, 
                  PRSMY96,
                  POUMY96,
                  PNGMY96 | 
               
              
                | PRIJU96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In Jun96 | 
                POGJU96, PDKJU96,
                  PEGJU96,  PRSJU96,
                  POUJU96, PNGJU96 | 
               
              
                | PRIJL96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In Jul96 | 
                POGJL96, PDKJL96,
                  PEGJL96,  PRSJL96,
                  POUJL96, PNGJL96 | 
               
              
                | PRIAU96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In Aug96 | 
                POGAU96,
                  PDKAU96,
                  PEGAU96, 
                  PRSAU96,
                  POUAU96,
                  PNGAU96 | 
               
              
                | PRISE96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In Sep96 | 
                POGSE96, PDKSE96,
                  PEGSE96,  PRSSE96,
                  POUSE96, PNGSE96 | 
               
              
                | PRIOC96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In Oct96 | 
                POGOC96,
                  PDKOC96,
                  PEGOC96, 
                  PRSOC96,
                  POUOC96,
                  PNGOC96 | 
               
              
                | PRINO96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In Nov96 | 
                POGNO96,
                  PDKNO96,
                  PEGNO96, 
                  PRSNO96,
                  POUNO96,
                  PNGNO96 | 
               
              
                | PRIDE96 | 
                Covered By Private Ins In Dec96 | 
                POGDE96,
                  PDKDE96,
                  PEGDE96, 
                  PRSDE96,
                  POUDE96, PNGDE96 | 
               
              
                | HPEJA96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In Jan96 | 
                PEGJA96, HP9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPEFE96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In Feb96 | 
                PEGFE96, HP9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPEMA96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In Mar96 | 
                PEGMA96, HP9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPEAP96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In Apr96 | 
                PEGAP96, HP9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPEMY96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In May96 | 
                PEGMY96, HP9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPEJU96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In Jun96 | 
                PEGJU96, HP9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPEJL96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In Jul96 | 
                PEGJL96, HP9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPEAU96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In Aug96 | 
                PEGAU96, HP9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPESE96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In Sep96 | 
                PEGSE96, HP9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPEOC96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In Oct96 | 
                PEGOC96, HP9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPENO96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In Nov96 | 
                PEGNO96, HP9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPEDE96 | 
                Holder Of Empl Union Ins In Dec96 | 
                PEGDE96, HP 9, 11 | 
               
              
                | HPDJA96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Jan96 | 
                PDKJA96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPDFE96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Feb96 | 
                PDKFE96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPDMA96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Mar96 | 
                PDKMA96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPDAP96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Apr96 | 
                PDKAP96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPDMY96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) May96 | 
                PDKMY96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPDJU96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Jun96 | 
                PDKJU96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPDJL96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Jul96 | 
                PDKJL96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPDAU96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Aug96 | 
                PDKAU96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPDSE96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Sep96 | 
                PDKSE96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPDOC96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Oct96 | 
                PDKOC96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPDNO96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Nov96 | 
                PDKNO96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPDDE96 | 
                Holder Of Priv Ins (Source Unknwn) Dec96 | 
                PDKDE96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPNJA96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In Jan96 | 
                PNGJA96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPNFE96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In Feb96 | 
                PNGFE96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPNMA96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In Mar96 | 
                PNGMA96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPNAP96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In Apr96 | 
                PNGAP96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPNMY96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In May96 | 
                PNGMY96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPNJU96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In Jun96 | 
                PNGJU96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPNJL96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In Jul96 | 
                PNGJL96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPNAU96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In Aug96 | 
                PNGAU96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPNSE96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In Sep96 | 
                PNGSE96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPNOC96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In Oct96 | 
                PNGOC96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPNNO96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In Nov96 | 
                PNGNO96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPNDE96 | 
                Holder Of Nongroup Ins In Dec96 | 
                PNGDE96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPOJA96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In Jan96 | 
                POGJA96; HP11  | 
               
              
                | HPOFE96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In Feb96 | 
                POGFE96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPOMA96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In Mar96 | 
                POGMA96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPOAP96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In Apr96 | 
                POGAP96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPOMY96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In May96 | 
                POGMY96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPOJU96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In Jun96 | 
                POGJU96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPOJL96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In Jul96 | 
                POGJL96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPOAU96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In Aug96 | 
                POGAU96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPOSE96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In Sep96 | 
                POGSE96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPOOC96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In Oct96 | 
                POGOC96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPONO96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In Nov96 | 
                POGNO96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPODE96 | 
                Holder Of Other Group Ins In Dec96 | 
                POGDE96; HP11 | 
               
              
                | HPSJA96 | 
                Holder Of Self-Emp-1 Ins In Jan96 | 
                PRSJA96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPSFE96 | 
                Holder Of Sefl-Emp-1 Ins In Feb96 | 
                PRSFE96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPSMA96 | 
                Holder Of Self-Emp-1 Ins In Mar96 | 
                PRSMA96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPSAP96 | 
                Holder Of Self-Emp-1 Ins In Apr96 | 
                PRSAP96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPSMY96 | 
                Holder Of Self-Emp-1 Ins In May96 | 
                PRSMY96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPSJU96 | 
                Holder Of Self-Emp-1 Ins In Jun96 | 
                PRSJU96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPSJL96 | 
                Holder Of Self-Emp-1 Ins In Jul96 | 
                PRSJL96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPSAU96 | 
                Holder Of Self-Emp-1 Ins In Aug96 | 
                PRSAU96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPSSE96 | 
                Holder Of Self-Emp-1 Ins In Sep96 | 
                PRSSE96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPSOC96 | 
                Holder Of Self-Emp-1 Ins In Oct96 | 
                PRSOC96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPSNO96 | 
                Holder Of Self-Emp-1 Ins In Nov96 | 
                PRSNO96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPSDE96 | 
                Holder Of Self-Emp-1 Ins In Dec96 | 
                PRSDE96; HP9 | 
               
              
                | HPRJA96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In Jan96 | 
                HPEJA97, HPSJA96, HPOJA96, HPNJA96, HRDJA96  | 
               
              
                | HPRFE96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In Feb96 | 
                HPEFE97, HPSFE96, HPOFE96, HPNFE96, HRDFE96  | 
               
              
                | HPRMA96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In Mar96 | 
                HPEMA97, HPSMA96, HPOMA96, HPNMA96,
                  HRDMA96  | 
               
              
                | HPRAP96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In Apr96 | 
                HPEAP97, HPSAP96, HPOAP96, HPNAP96, HRDAP96  | 
               
              
                | HPRMY96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In May96 | 
                HPEMY97, HPSMY96, HPOMY96, HPNMY96,
                  HRDMY96  | 
               
              
                | HPRJU96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In Jun96 | 
                HPEJU97, HPSJU96, HPOJU96, HPNJU96, HRDJU96  | 
               
              
                | HPRJL96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In Jul96 | 
                HPEJL97, HPSJL96, HPOJL96, HPNJL96, HRDJL96  | 
               
              
                | HPRAU96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In Aug96 | 
                HPEAU97, HPSAU96, HPOAU96, HPNAU96,
                  HRDAU96  | 
               
              
                | HPRSE96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In Sep96 | 
                HPESE97, HPSSE96, HPOSE96, HPNSE96, HRDSE96  | 
               
              
                | HPROC96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In Oct96 | 
                HPEOC97, HPSOC96, HPOOC96, HPNOC96,
                  HRDOC96  | 
               
              
                | HPRNO96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In Nov96 | 
                HPENO97, HPSNO96, HPONO96, HPNNO96,
                  HRDNO96  | 
               
              
                | HPRDE96 | 
                Holder Of Private Insurance In Dec96 | 
                HPEDE97, HPSDE96, HPODE96, HPNDE96,
                  HRDDE96  | 
               
              
                | INSJA96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In Jan96 (Ed) | 
                PUBJA96X, PRIJA96  | 
               
              
                | INSFE96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In Feb96 (Ed) | 
                PUBFE96X, PRIFE96  | 
               
              
                | INSMA96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In Mar96 (Ed) | 
                PUBMA96X, PRIMA96  | 
               
              
                | INSAP96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In Apr96 (Ed) | 
                PUBAP96X, PRIAP96  | 
               
              
                | INSMY96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In May96 (Ed) | 
                PUBMY96X, PRIMY96  | 
               
              
                | INSJU96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In Jun96 (Ed) | 
                PUBJU96X, PRIJU96  | 
               
              
                | INSJL96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In Jul96 (Ed) | 
                PUBJL96X, PRIJL96  | 
               
              
                | INSAU96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In Aug96 (Ed) | 
                PUBAU96X, PRIAU96  | 
               
              
                | INSSE96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In Sep96 (Ed) | 
                PUBSE96X, PRISE96  | 
               
              
                | INSOC96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In Oct96 (Ed) | 
                PUBOC96X, PRIOC96  | 
               
              
                | INSNO96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In Nov96 (Ed) | 
                PUBNO96X, PRINO96  | 
               
              
                | INSDE96X | 
                Covrd By Hosp/Med Ins In Dec96 (Ed) | 
                PUBDE96X, PRIDE96  | 
               
              
                | PRVEVER | 
                Ever have private insurance during 96 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | CHPEVER | 
                Ever have CHAMPUS/CHAMPVA during 96 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | MCDEVER | 
                Ever have Medicaid during 96 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | MCREVER | 
                Ever have Medicare during 96 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | OPAEVER | 
                Ever have other public A during 96 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | OPBEVER | 
                Ever have other public B during 96 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | UNINSURD | 
                Uninsured all of 96 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | INSCOV96 | 
                Health Insurance Coverage Indicator 96 | 
                Constructed  | 
               
             
          
         
        
            Return To Table Of 
Contents 
    
        PREGNANCY VARIABLES 
        
          
            
              
                | VARIABLE | 
                DESCRIPTION | 
                SOURCE | 
               
              
                | PREGRD1 | 
                Any Pregnancy Rd 1 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | PREGRD2 | 
                Any Pregnancy Rd 2 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | PREGRD3 | 
                Any Pregnancy Rd 3 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | NOWPREG1 | 
                Pregnant at Time of Interview Rd 1 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | NOWPREG2 | 
                Pregnant at Time of Interview Rd 2 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | NOWPREG3 | 
                Pregnant at Time of Interview Rd 3 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | LIVEBIR1 | 
                Live Birth Rd 1 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | LIVEBIR2 | 
                Live Birth Rd 2 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | LIVEBIR3 | 
                Live Birth Rd 3 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | NUMPRG13 | 
                Number of Pregnancies Rds 1-3 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | PREG96 | 
                Pregnant Anytime 1996 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | BIRTH96 | 
                Any Live Birth 1996 | 
                Constructed | 
               
             
          
         
        
            Return To Table Of 
Contents 
    
        DISABILITY DAYS VARIABLES 
        
          
                          
              
                | VARIABLE | 
                DESCRIPTION | 
                SOURCE | 
               
              
                | DDNOWRK1 | 
                Health problem causes work loss (R1) | 
                DD 02 | 
               
              
                | DDNOWRK2 | 
                Health problem causes work loss (R2) | 
                DD 02 | 
               
              
                | DDNOWRK3 | 
                Health problem causes work loss (R3) | 
                DD 02 | 
               
              
                | WRKINBD1 | 
                ½ or more of workloss day spent in bed (R1) | 
                DD 04 | 
               
              
                | WRKINBD2 | 
                ½ or more of workloss day spent in bed (R2) | 
                DD 04 | 
               
              
                | WRKINBD3 | 
                ½ or more of workloss day spent in bed (R3) | 
                DD 04 | 
               
              
                | DDNSCHL1 | 
                Health problem causes school loss day (R1) | 
                DD 05 | 
               
              
                | DDNSCHL2 | 
                Health problem causes school loss day (R2) | 
                DD 05 | 
               
              
                | DDNSCHL3 | 
                Health problem causes school loss day (R3) | 
                DD 05 | 
               
              
                | SCLINBD1 | 
                ½ or more of school loss day spent in bed (R1) | 
                DD 07 | 
               
              
                | SCLINBD2 | 
                ½ or more of school loss day spent in bed (R2) | 
                DD 07 | 
               
              
                | SCLINBD3 | 
                ½ or more of school loss day spent in bed (R3) | 
                DD 07 | 
               
              
                | DDBEDYS1 | 
                Bed days other than work or school loss days (R1) | 
                DD 08 | 
               
              
                | DDBEDYS2 | 
                Bed days other than work or school loss days (R2) | 
                DD 08 | 
               
              
                | DDBEDYS3 | 
                Bed days other than work or school loss days (R3) | 
                DD 08 | 
               
              
                | OTHRDYS1 | 
                Work loss days because of other's health (R1) | 
                DD 10 | 
               
              
                | OTHRDYS2 | 
                Work loss days because of other's health (R2) | 
                DD 10 | 
               
              
                | OTHRDYS3 | 
                Work loss days because of other's health (R3) | 
                DD 10 | 
               
              
                | OTHNMDD1 | 
                Number work loss days for other's health (R1) | 
                DD 11 | 
               
              
                | OTHNMDD2 | 
                Number work loss days for other's health (R2) | 
                DD 11 | 
               
              
                | OTHNMDD3 | 
                Number work loss days for other's health (R3) | 
                DD 11 | 
               
             
          
         
        
            Return To Table Of 
Contents 
    
        ACCESS TO CARE VARIABLES 
        
          
            
              
                | VARIABLE | 
                DESCRIPTION | 
                SOURCE | 
               
              
                | ACCELIG2 | 
                Pers Eligible for Access Supplement-R2 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | HAVEUSC2 | 
                Does Person Have a Usc Provider?-R2 | 
                AC01 | 
               
              
                | YNOUSC2 | 
                Main Reason Pers Doesn't Have a Usc-R2 | 
                AC03 | 
               
              
                | NOREAS42 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: No Oth Reas (Ac04)-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | SELDSIC2 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: Seldom/never Sick-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | NEWAREA2 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: Recently Moved-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | DKWHRUS2 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: Dk Where to Go-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | USCNOTA2 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: Usc Not Available-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | PERSLAN2 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: Language-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | DIFFPLA2 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: Different Places-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | INSRPLA2 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: Just Changed Insur-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | MYSELF2 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: No Docs/treat Self-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | CARECOS2 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: Cost of Med Care-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | OTHINSR2 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: Other Insur Reason-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | OTHREA42 | 
                Oth Reas No Usc: Other Reason (Ac04)-R2 | 
                AC04 | 
               
              
                | TYPEPLC2 | 
                Usc Type of Place-R2 | 
                AC06, AC07 | 
               
              
                | PROVTYX2 | 
                Provider Type-R2 | 
                PV01, PV03,
                  PV05, PV10 | 
               
              
                | YGOTOUS2 | 
                Main Reason Pers Goes to Hosp Usc-R2 | 
                AC08 | 
               
              
                | NOREAS92 | 
                Oth Reas Go to Usc: No Oth Reas(ac09)-R2 | 
                AC09 | 
               
              
                | LIKESUS2 | 
                Oth Reas Go to Usc: Pref/likes Usc-R2 | 
                AC09 | 
               
              
                | DKELSEW2 | 
                Oth Reas Go to Usc: Dk Wh Else to Go-R2 | 
                AC09 | 
               
              
                | AFFORD2 | 
                Oth Reas Go to Usc: Can't Affrd Elsew-R2 | 
                AC09 | 
               
              
                | OFFICE2 | 
                Oth Reas Go to Usc: Dr Office at Opd-R2 | 
                AC09 | 
               
              
                | AVAILTI2 | 
                Oth Reas Go to Usc: Avail When Time-R2 | 
                AC09 | 
               
              
                | CONVENI2 | 
                Oth Reas Go to Usc: Convenience-R2 | 
                AC09 | 
               
              
                | BSTPLAC2 | 
                Oth Reas Go to Usc: Best for Cond-R2 | 
                AC09 | 
               
              
                | INSREAS2 | 
                Oth Reas Go to Usc: Insur-related-R2 | 
                AC09 | 
               
              
                | OTHREA92 | 
                Oth Reas Go to Usc: Oth Reas (Ac09)-R2 | 
                AC09 | 
               
              
                | GETTOUS2 | 
                How Does Persn Get to Usc Provider-R2 | 
                AC09A | 
               
              
                | TYPEPER2 | 
                Usc Type of Provider-R2 | 
                AC10, AC11,
                  AC110V, AC12,
                  AC12OV | 
               
              
                | LOCATIO2 | 
                Usc Location-R2 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | MINORPR2 | 
                Go to Usc for New Health Problems-R2 | 
                AC14 | 
               
              
                | PREVENT2 | 
                Go to Usc for Preventive Hlth Care-R2 | 
                AC14 | 
               
              
                | REFFRLS2 | 
                Go to Usc for Referrals-R2 | 
                AC14 | 
               
              
                | OFFHOUR2 | 
                Usc Has Office Hrs Nights/weekends-R2 | 
                AC15 | 
               
              
                | APPTWLK2 | 
                "When See Usc, Have Appt or Walk In-R2" | 
                AC16 | 
               
              
                | APPDIFF2 | 
                How Difficult to Get Appt with Usc-R2 | 
                AC17 | 
               
              
                | WAITTIM2 | 
                "With Appt, How Long Til Seen by Usc-R2" | 
                AC18 | 
               
              
                | PHONEDI2 | 
                How Difficult Contact Usc by Phone-R2 | 
                AC19 | 
               
              
                | PRLISTE2 | 
                Does Usc Prov Listen?-R2 | 
                AC19A | 
               
              
                | TREATMN2 | 
                Prov Ask about Other Treatments-R2 | 
                AC19B | 
               
              
                | CONFIDN2 | 
                Confident in Usc Prov's Ability?-R2 | 
                AC19C | 
               
              
                | PROVSTA2 | 
                How Satisfied with Usc Staff-R2 | 
                AC19D | 
               
              
                | USCQUAL2 | 
                Satisfied with Quality of Care-R2 | 
                AC19E | 
               
              
                | CHNGUSC2 | 
                Has Anyone Chang Usc in Last Year-R2 | 
                AC20 | 
               
              
                | YCHNGUS2 | 
                Why Did Person(s) Change Usc-R2 | 
                AC21 | 
               
              
                | ANYUSC2 | 
                Has Anyone Had a Usc in Last Year-R2 | 
                AC22 | 
               
              
                | YNOMORE2 | 
                Why Don't They Have a Usc Anymore?-R2 | 
                AC23 | 
               
              
                | NOCARE2 | 
                Did Anyone Go Without Health Care-R2 | 
                AC24 | 
               
              
                | HCNEEDS2 | 
                Satisfied Family Can Get Care-R2 | 
                AC24A | 
               
              
                | OBTAINH2 | 
                Anyone Have Difficlty Obtain Care-R2 | 
                AC25 | 
               
              
                | MAINPRO2 | 
                Main Reason Experienced Difficulty-R2 | 
                AC25A | 
               
              
                | NOOTHPR2 | 
                Difficulty: No Other Problems-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | NOAFFOR2 | 
                Difficulty: Couldn't Afford Care-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | INSNOPA2 | 
                Difficulty: Ins Company Won't Pay-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | PREEXCO2 | 
                Difficulty: Pre-existing Condition-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | INSRQRE2 | 
                Difficulty: Ins Required Referral-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | REFUSIN2 | 
                Difficulty: Dr Refused Ins Plan-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | DISTANC2 | 
                Difficulty: Distance-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | PUBTRAN2 | 
                Difficulty: Public Transportation-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | EXPENSI2 | 
                Difficulty: Too Expen to Get There-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | HEARPRO2 | 
                Difficulty: Hearing Impair/ Loss-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | LANGBAR2 | 
                Difficulty: Language Barrier-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | INTOBLD2 | 
                Difficulty: Hard to Get into Bldg-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | INSIDE2 | 
                Difficulty: Hard to Get Around-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | EQUIPMN2 | 
                Difficulty: No Appropriate Equip-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | OFFWORK2 | 
                Difficulty: Couldn't Get Time Off-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | DKWHERG2 | 
                Difficulty: Dk Where to Go-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | REFUSER2 | 
                Difficulty: Was Refused Services-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | CHLDCAR2 | 
                Difficulty: Couldn't Get Child Care-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | NOTIME2 | 
                Difficulty: No Time/took Too Long-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
              
                | OTHRPRO2 | 
                Difficulty: Other-R2 | 
                AC26 | 
               
             
          
         
        
            Return To Table Of 
Contents 
    
        HEALTH STATUS VARIABLES 
        
          
            
              
                | VARIABLE | 
                DESCRIPTION | 
                SOURCE | 
               
              
                | RTEHLTH1 | 
                Perceived Health Status (R1) | 
                CE 1 | 
               
              
                | RTEPROX1 | 
                Self/Proxy Rating Of Health (R1) | 
                CE 1OV | 
               
              
                | MNTHLTH1 | 
                Perceived Mental Health Status (R1) | 
                CE 2 | 
               
              
                | MNTPROX1 | 
                Self/Proxy Rating Of Mental Health (R1) | 
                CE 2OV | 
               
              
                | IADLHLP1 | 
                Iadl Screener (R1) | 
                HE 2-4 | 
               
              
                | ADLHELP1 | 
                Adl Screener (R1) | 
                HE 5-6 | 
               
              
                | AIDHELP1 | 
                Used Assistive Devices (R1) | 
                HE 7-8 | 
               
              
                | WALKLIM1 | 
                Limitations In Physical Functioning (R1) | 
                HE 9-18 | 
               
              
                | LIFTDIF1 | 
                Difficulty Lifting 10 Pounds (R1) | 
                HE 11 | 
               
              
                | STEPDIF1 | 
                Difficulty Walking Up 10 Steps (R1) | 
                HE 12 | 
               
              
                | WALKDIF1 | 
                Difficulty Walking 3 Blocks (R1) | 
                HE 13 | 
               
              
                | MILEDIF1 | 
                Difficulty Walking A Mile (R1) | 
                HE 14 | 
               
              
                | STNDDIF1 | 
                Difficulty Standing 20 Minutes (R1) | 
                HE 15 | 
               
              
                | BENDDIF1 | 
                Difficulty Bending/Stooping (R1) | 
                HE 16 | 
               
              
                | RECHDIF1 | 
                Difficulty Reaching Overhead (R1) | 
                HE 17 | 
               
              
                | FINGRDF1 | 
                Difficulty Using Fingers To Grasp (R1) | 
                HE 18 | 
               
              
                | ACTLIMT1 | 
                Any Limitation Work/Housewrk/School (R1) | 
                HE 19-20 | 
               
              
                | WRKLIMT1 | 
                Work Limitation (R1) | 
                HE 20A | 
               
              
                | HSELIMT1 | 
                Housework Limitation (R1) | 
                HE 20A | 
               
              
                | SCHLIMIT1 | 
                School Limitation | 
                HE 20A | 
               
              
                | UNABLE1 | 
                Completely Unable To Do Activity (R1) | 
                HE 21 | 
               
              
                | SOCLIMT1 | 
                Social Limitations (R1) | 
                HE 22-23 | 
               
              
                | COGLIMT1 | 
                Cognitive Limitations (R1) | 
                HE 24-25 | 
               
              
                | HSELIG2 | 
                Is Pers Eligible for HS Supplement | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | RTEHLTH2 | 
                Perceived Health Status (R2) | 
                CE 1 | 
               
              
                | RTEPROX2 | 
                Self/Proxy Rating Of Health (R2) | 
                CE 1OV | 
               
              
                | MNTHLTH2 | 
                Perceived Mental Health Status (R2) | 
                CE 2 | 
               
              
                | MNTPROX2 | 
                Self/Proxy Rating Of Mental Health (R2) | 
                CE 2OV | 
               
              
                | IADLHLP2 | 
                Iadl Screener (R2) | 
                HE 2-4 | 
               
              
                | ADLHELP2 | 
                Adl Screener (R2) | 
                HE 5-6 | 
               
              
                | WEARGLA2 | 
                Wears Eyeglasses Or Contacts | 
                HE 26-27 | 
               
              
                | SEEDIF2 | 
                Difficulty Seeing (W/Glasses/Contacts) | 
                HE 28-29 | 
               
              
                | BLIND2 | 
                Person Is Blind | 
                HE 30 | 
               
              
                | READNEW2 | 
                Can Read Newsprint (W/Glasses/Contacts) | 
                HE 31 | 
               
              
                | RECPEOP2 | 
                Can Recognize People (W/Glasses/Contacts) | 
                HE 32 | 
               
              
                | VISION2 | 
                Vision Impairment (Summary) | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | HEARAID2 | 
                Person Wears Hearing Aid | 
                HE 33-34 | 
               
              
                | HEARDIF2 | 
                Any Difficulty Hearing (W/Hearing Aid) | 
                HE 35-36 | 
               
              
                | DEAF2 | 
                Person Is Deaf | 
                HE 37 | 
               
              
                | HEARMOS2 | 
                Can Hear Most Conversation | 
                HE 38 | 
               
              
                | HEARSOM2 | 
                Can Hear Some Conversation | 
                HE 39 | 
               
              
                | HEARING2 | 
                Hearing Impairment (Summary) | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | ANYLIM12 | 
                Any Limitation (R1&R2) | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | LIMACT2 | 
                Limited In Any Activities (<5 Years) | 
                HE 40-41 | 
               
              
                | PLAYLIM2 | 
                Limited In Play Activity (<5 Years) | 
                HE 42  | 
               
              
                | CANTPLA2 | 
                Can't Participate In Usual Play (<5 Yr) | 
                HE 43 | 
               
              
                | SPECPRO2 | 
                In Special Program (<5 Years) | 
                HE 44 | 
               
              
                | DTPSHOT2 | 
                Immunization For Dtp Shots (<7 Years) | 
                HE 45 | 
               
              
                | NUMDTP2 | 
                One Or Several Dtp Shots (<7 Years) | 
                HE 46 | 
               
              
                | POLIOSH2 | 
                Immunization For Polio (<7 Years) | 
                HE 47 | 
               
              
                | NUMPOLI2 | 
                One Or Several Polio Shots (<7 Years) | 
                HE 48 | 
               
              
                | MMRSHOT2 | 
                Immunization For Measles/Mumps/Rubella | 
                HE 49 | 
               
              
                | HEPBSHT2 | 
                Immunization For Hepatitis (<7 Years) | 
                HE 49A | 
               
              
                | MOMPROB2 | 
                Problem Getting Along With Mother (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | DADPROB2 | 
                Problem Getting Along With Father (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | UNHAP2 | 
                Problem Feeling Unhappy Or Sad (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | SCHLBEH2 | 
                Problem Behavior At School (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | HAVEFUN2 | 
                Problem Having Fun (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | ADULPRO2 | 
                Problem Getting Along With Adults (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | NEVRAFR2 | 
                Problem Feeling Nervous/Afraid (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | SIBPROB2 | 
                Problem Getting Along With Sibs (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | KIDPROB2 | 
                Problem Getting Along With Kids (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | SPORPRO2 | 
                Problem With Sports/Hobbies (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | SCHLPRO2 | 
                Problem With Schoolwork (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | HOMEBEH2 | 
                Problem With Behavior At Home (5-17) | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | TROUBLE2 | 
                Problem Staying Out Of Trouble  | 
                HE 50 | 
               
              
                | SPECSCH2 | 
                Need Special School Program (5-17) | 
                HE 51 | 
               
              
                | SPECED2 | 
                In Special Education  (5-17) | 
                HE 52 | 
               
              
                | PROGTXT2 | 
                Descrip of Spec Ed Progrm (5-17) | 
                HE52A | 
               
              
                | SPCHTHE2 | 
                Received Speech Therapy (5-17) | 
                HE 52B | 
               
              
                | PSYCNSL2 | 
                Psychological Counseling | 
                HE 52B | 
               
              
                | OCUPTHE2 | 
                Received Occupational Therapy (5-17) | 
                HE 52B | 
               
              
                | VOCSVCS2 | 
                Received Vocational Services (5-17) | 
                HE 52B | 
               
              
                | TUTOR2 | 
                Received Tutoring (5-17) | 
                HE 52B | 
               
              
                | READINT2 | 
                Uses Reader Or Interpreter (5-17) | 
                HE 52B | 
               
              
                | PHYTHER2 | 
                Received Physical Therapy (5-17) | 
                HE 52B | 
               
              
                | LIFSKIL2 | 
                Received Life Skills Training (5-17) | 
                HE 52B | 
               
              
                | FAMCNS2 | 
                Received Family Counseling (5-17) | 
                HE 52B | 
               
              
                | RECTHER2 | 
                Received Recreational Therapy (5-17) | 
                HE 52B | 
               
              
                | OTHSVC2 | 
                Received Other School Services (5-17) | 
                HE 52B | 
               
              
                | CANTSCH2 | 
                Limited/Unable To Go To School (5-17) | 
                HE 53 | 
               
              
                | LMOTACT2 | 
                Limited In Non-School Activity (5-17) | 
                HE 54 | 
               
              
                | SPECIFL2 | 
                What Type of Limitation (5-17) | 
                HE54OV | 
               
              
                | HEALTHY2 | 
                Child Resists Illness Well (0-17) | 
                HE 55 | 
               
              
                | NTHLTHY2 | 
                Less Healthy Than Same Age Kids (0-17) | 
                HE 55 | 
               
              
                | GETSICK2 | 
                Child Catches Things Going Around (0-17) | 
                HE 55 | 
               
              
                | HIGHTFT2 | 
                Child's Height  Feet (0-17) | 
                HE 56 | 
               
              
                | HIGHTIN2 | 
                Child's Height  Inches (0-17) | 
                HE 56 | 
               
              
                | WEIGHLB2 | 
                Child's Weight  Pounds (0-17) | 
                HE 57 | 
               
              
                | WEIGHOZ2 | 
                Child's Weight  Ounces (0-17) | 
                HE 57 | 
               
              
                | CHLDLIM2 | 
                Child Has Any Limitation (0-17) | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | ALTCAR96 | 
                Any Alternative Care Use '96 | 
                AP 1 | 
               
              
                | ACUPUN96 | 
                Person Received Acupuncture '96 | 
                AP 2 | 
               
              
                | NUTRIT96 | 
                Person Received Nutritional Advice '96 | 
                AP 2 | 
               
              
                | MASSAG96 | 
                Person Received Massage Therapy '96 | 
                AP 2 | 
               
              
                | HERBAL96 | 
                Person Purchased Herbal Remedies '96 | 
                AP 2 | 
               
              
                | BIOFDB96 | 
                Person Received Biofeedback '96 | 
                AP 2 | 
               
              
                | MEDITA96 | 
                Person Received Meditation Training '96 | 
                AP 2 | 
               
              
                | HOMEOT96 | 
                Person Received Homeopathic Therapy '96 | 
                AP 2 | 
               
              
                | SPIRTU96 | 
                Person Received Spiritual Healing '96 | 
                AP 2 | 
               
              
                | HYPNO96 | 
                Person Received Hypnosis '96 | 
                AP 2 | 
               
              
                | TRADIT96 | 
                Person Received Traditional Medicine '96 | 
                AP 2 | 
               
              
                | ALTOTH96 | 
                Person Received Other Alternative Tx '96 | 
                AP 2 | 
               
              
                | MASSTH96 | 
                Person Saw Massage Therapist '96 | 
                AP 3 | 
               
              
                | ACUPTH96 | 
                Person Saw Acupuncturist '96 | 
                AP 3 | 
               
              
                | MDTREA96 | 
                Per Saw Physician For Alternative Tx '96 | 
                AP 3 | 
               
              
                | NURTRT96 | 
                Person Saw Nurse For Alternative Tx '96 | 
                AP 3 | 
               
              
                | HOMEOM96 | 
                Pers Saw Homeopathic/Naturopathic Doc 96 | 
                AP 3 | 
               
              
                | CHIRO96 | 
                Person Saw Chiropractor '96 | 
                AP 3 | 
               
              
                | CLERGY96 | 
                Person Saw Clergy Or Spiritualist '96 | 
                AP 3 | 
               
              
                | HERBTR96 | 
                Person Saw Herbalist '96 | 
                AP 3 | 
               
              
                | OTHALT96 | 
                Pers Saw Oth Practitioner For Alt Tx '96 | 
                AP 3 | 
               
              
                | ALCRVS96 | 
                Num Of Visits To Alternative Care '96 | 
                AP 4 | 
               
              
                | ALCRVE96 | 
                Estimated Number Of Alt Tx Visits '96 | 
                AP 4A | 
               
              
                | ALCRSP96 | 
                Used Alt Care For Specific Hlth Prob '96 | 
                AP 5 | 
               
              
                | DISCAL96 | 
                Discussed Alt Care With Regular MD '96 | 
                AP 7 | 
               
              
                | REFRMD96 | 
                Referred By Physician For Alt Tx '96 | 
                AP 8 | 
               
              
                | ALCREE96 | 
                Estimate Total Amt Spent For Alt Care | 
                AP 9 | 
               
              
                | ALCREX96 | 
                Range Of Amount Spent | 
                AP 10 | 
               
              
                | INSALT96 | 
                Did Insurance Pay For Care | 
                AP 11 | 
               
              
                | PERCIN96 | 
                Est Percent Paid By Insurance | 
                AP 11A | 
               
              
                | PALTEX96 | 
                First Total Spent On Alt Remedies | 
                AP 11B | 
               
              
                | PALTEE96 | 
                Range Spent On Alt Remedies | 
                AP 11C | 
               
              
                | DENTCHK3 | 
                Dental Checkup Frequency (R3) | 
                AP 12  | 
               
              
                | BLDPCHK3 | 
                Time Since Blood Pressure Check (R3) | 
                AP 15 | 
               
              
                | CHOLCHK3 | 
                Time Since Cholesterol Check (R3) | 
                AP 16 | 
               
              
                | PHYSICL3 | 
                Time Since Complete Physical (R3) | 
                AP 17 | 
               
              
                | FLUSHOT3 | 
                Time Since Flu Shot (R3) | 
                AP18 | 
               
              
                | WEARDEN3 | 
                Person Wears Dentures (R3) | 
                AP 18A | 
               
              
                | LOSTEET3 | 
                Person Lost All Adult Teeth (R3) | 
                AP 18B | 
               
              
                | PROSEXA3 | 
                Time Since Prostate Exam (R3) | 
                AP 19 | 
               
              
                | PAPSMER3 | 
                Time Since Pap Smear (R3) | 
                AP 20 | 
               
              
                | BRSTEXA3 | 
                Time Since Breast Exam (R3) | 
                AP 21 | 
               
              
                | MAMOGRM3 | 
                Time Since Mammogram (R3) | 
                AP 22 | 
               
             
          
         
        Return To Table Of Contents
         WEIGHTS VARIABLES 
        
          
            
              
                | VARIABLE | 
                DESCRIPTION | 
                SOURCE | 
               
              
                | WGTRU2T  | 
                Family Level Round 2 Weight | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | WGTSP2T | 
                Person Round 2 Weight | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | VARSTRT2 | 
                Variance Estimation Stratum - Round 2 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | VARPSU2  | 
                Variance Estimation PSU - Round 2 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | WTFAMF96 | 
                Poverty Adjusted Family Weight | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | WTCFAM96 | 
                Pov Adj Family Wgts-Cps Fam On 12/31/96 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | WTDPER96 | 
                Poverty/Mortality Adj Person Weight  | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | VARSTR96 | 
                Variance Estimation Stratum-1996 | 
                Constructed | 
               
              
                | VARPSU96 | 
                Variance Estimation Psu-1996 | 
                Constructed | 
               
             
          
         
        Return To Table Of Contents        
         Appendix 1
         Summary of Utilization and Expenditure Variables by Health
          Service Category 
        
          
            
              
                |   HEALTH SERVICE CATEGORY  | 
                  UTILIZATION VARIABLE(S)  | 
                  EXPENDITURE VARIABLE(S)1  | 
               
              
                All Health Services  | 
                --  | 
                TOT***96  | 
               
              
                Office Based Visits  | 
                   | 
                   | 
               
              
                Total Office Based Visits (Physician + Non-physician + Unknown)  | 
                OBTOTV96  | 
                OBV***96  | 
               
              
                Office Based Visits to Physicians  | 
                OBDRV96  | 
                OBD***96  | 
               
              
                Office Based Visits to Non-Physicians  | 
                OBOTHV96  | 
                OBO***96  | 
               
              
                Office Based Visits to Chiropractors  | 
                OBCHIR96  | 
                OBC***96  | 
               
              
                Office Based Nurse or Nurse Practitioner Visits  | 
                OBNURS96  | 
                OBN***96  | 
               
              
                Office Based Visits to Optometrists  | 
                OBOPTO96  | 
                OBE***96  | 
               
              
                Office Based Physician Assistant Visits  | 
                OBASST96  | 
                OBA***96  | 
               
              
                Office Based Physical or Occupational Therapist Visits  | 
                OBTHER96  | 
                OBT***96  | 
               
              
                Hospital Outpatient Visits  | 
                   | 
                   | 
               
              
                Total Outpatient Visits (Physician + Non-physician + Unknown)  | 
                OPTOTV96  | 
                --  | 
               
              
                Facility Expense  | 
                --  | 
                OPF***96  | 
               
              
                SBD Expense  | 
                --  | 
                OPD***96  | 
               
              
                   | 
                   | 
                   | 
               
              
                Outpatient Visits to Physicians  | 
                OPDRV96  | 
                --  | 
               
              
                Facility Expense  | 
                --  | 
                OPV***96  | 
               
              
                SBD Expense  | 
                --  | 
                OPS***96  | 
               
              
                   | 
                   | 
                   | 
               
              
                Outpatient Visits to Non-Physicians  | 
                OPOTHV96  | 
                --  | 
               
              
                Facility Expense  | 
                --  | 
                OPO***96  | 
               
              
                SBD Expense  | 
                --  | 
                OPP***96  | 
               
              
                Emergency Room Visits  | 
                   | 
                   | 
               
              
                Total Emergency Room Visits  | 
                ERTOT96  | 
                --  | 
               
              
                Facility Expense  | 
                --  | 
                ERF***96  | 
               
              
                SBD Expense  | 
                --  | 
                ERD***96  | 
               
             
          
         
		1 See key at end of table for specific categories for ***. 
		Return To Table Of Contents 
        
        
          
              
                |   HEALTH SERVICE CATEGORY  | 
                  UTILIZATION VARIABLE(S)  | 
                  EXPENDITURE VARIABLE(S)  | 
               
              
                Inpatient Hospital Stays (Including Zero Night Stays)  | 
                   | 
                   | 
               
              
                Total Inpatient Stays (Including Zero Night Stays)  | 
                IPDIS96, IPNGTD96  | 
                --  | 
               
              
                Facility Expense  | 
                --  | 
                IPF***96  | 
               
              
                SBD Expense  | 
                --  | 
                IPD***96  | 
               
              
                   | 
                    | 
                   | 
               
              
                Zero night Hospital Stays  | 
                IPZERO96  | 
                --  | 
               
              
                Facility Expense  | 
                --  | 
                ZIF***96  | 
               
              
                SBD Expense  | 
                --  | 
                ZID***96  | 
               
             
          
         
        Return To Table Of Contents 
        
        
          
              
                |   HEALTH SERVICE CATEGORY  | 
                  UTILIZATION VARIABLE(S)  | 
                  EXPENDITURE VARIABLE(S)  | 
               
              
                Dental Visits  | 
                   | 
                   | 
               
              
                Total Dental Visits  | 
                DVTOT96  | 
                DVT***96  | 
               
              
                General Dental Visits  | 
                DVGEN96  | 
                DVG***96  | 
               
              
                Orthodontist Visits  | 
                DVORTH96  | 
                DVO***96  | 
               
              
                Home Health Care  | 
                   | 
                   | 
               
              
                Total Home Health Care  | 
                HHTOTM96, HHTOTD96  | 
                --  | 
               
              
                Agency Sponsored  | 
                HHAGM96, HHAGD96  | 
                HHA***96  | 
               
              
                Paid Independent Providers  | 
                HHINDM96, HHINDD96  | 
                HHN***96  | 
               
              
                Informal  | 
                HHINFM96, HHINFD96  | 
                --  | 
               
              
                Other  | 
                   | 
                   | 
               
              
                Vision Aids  | 
                --  | 
                VIS***96  | 
               
              
                Other Medical Supplies and Equipment  | 
                --  | 
                OTH***96  | 
               
              
                Prescription Medicines1  | 
                RXTOT96, RXFREE96  | 
                RX***96  | 
               
             
          
         
        KEY: To complete variable name, replace *** with a particular source of
          payment category as identified in the following table: 
        
              
                |   Source of Payment Category  | 
                  ***  | 
               
              
                Total payments (sum of all sources)  | 
                EXP  | 
               
              
                Out of Pocket  | 
                SLF  | 
               
              
                Medicare  | 
                MCR  | 
               
              
                Medicaid  | 
                MCD  | 
               
              
                Private Insurance  | 
                PRV  | 
               
              
                Veterans Administration  | 
                VA  | 
               
              
                CHAMPUS or CHAMPVA  | 
                CHM  | 
               
              
                Other Federal Sources  | 
                OFD  | 
               
              
                Other State and Local Sources  | 
                STL  | 
               
              
                Workers Compensation  | 
                WCP  | 
               
              
                Other Private  | 
                OPR  | 
               
              
                Other Public  | 
                OPU  | 
               
              
                Other Unclassified Sources  | 
                OSR  | 
               
              
                Total charges1  | 
                TCH  | 
               
             
        1 No charge variables on file for prescription
          medicines. 
         
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