Title: Public Health Information Network PHIN Series II
1Public Health Information Network (PHIN) Series
II
- Outbreak Investigation Methods
- From Mystery to Mastery
2(No Transcript)
3Access Series Files Online http//www.vdh.virgini
a.gov/EPR/Training.asp
- Session slides
- Session activities (when applicable)
- Session evaluation forms
- Speaker biographies
- Alternate Web site http//www.sph.unc.edu/nccphp/
phtin/index.htm -
4Site Sign-in Sheet
- Please submit your site sign-in sheet and
- session evaluation forms to
- Suzi Silverstein
- Director, Education and Training
- Emergency Preparedness Response Programs
- FAX (804) 225 - 3888
5Series IISession V
6Series II Sessions
7CDCOutbreak Management System
Software Support National Center for Public
Health Informatics outbreakms_at_cdc.gov / (800)
532-9929, option 6
8OMS Applications
- Track demographics, case investigations, and
exposure contact relationships for persons,
animals, events, travel events, vehicles,
objects, organizations, other organisms, and
locations. - Create household, social, or occupational
relationships among records - Run OMS on desktops or laptops CAPI
9OMS User Interface
Source http//www.cdc.gov/phin/software-solutio
ns/oms/index.html
10OMS User Interface
Source http//www.cdc.gov/phin/software-solution
s/oms/index.html
11OMS in Virginia
- Contact
- Michael A. Coletta, MPH
- Bioterrorism Surveillance Coordinator
- Division of Surveillance and Investigation
- Office of Epidemiology
- Telephone (804) 864-8099
- Email michael.coletta_at_vdh.virginia.gov
12Todays Presenters
- Aaron Wendelboe, MSPH
- Doctoral Candidate and
- Graduate Research Assistant,
- NC Center for Public Health Preparedness
- Erin Rothney, MPH
- Research Associate,
- NC Center for Public Health Preparedness
13Interviewing Techniques Learning Objectives
- Upon completion of this session, you will
- Recognize the interrelatedness of interview
techniques and questionnaire design - Understand key survey research terms
- Understand the advantages and disadvantages of
face-to-face, telephone, and computer assisted
interview methods
14Learning Objectives (contd.)
- Understand the advantages and disadvantages of
mail and Web-based survey implementation - Know what to address in interviewer training
- Recognize good interview techniques
- Understand confidentiality concerns from the
perspectives of both the respondent and the
outbreak investigator
15Lecturer
- Aaron Wendelboe, MSPH
- Doctoral Candidate and
- Graduate Research Assistant,
- NC Center for Public Health Preparedness
16Basic Steps of an Outbreak Investigation
- Verify the diagnosis and confirm the outbreak
- Define a case and conduct case finding
- Tabulate and orient data time, place, person
- Take immediate control measures
- Formulate and test hypothesis
- Plan and execute additional studies
- Implement and evaluate control measures
- Communicate findings
17Interviewing Techniques
18Introduction
- The role of interviews in outbreak investigations
- Types of interviewing methods
- Interrelatedness of interview method and
questionnaire design - Key survey research concepts
- Sampling
- Response rates
19Role of Interviews in Outbreak Investigations
- Primary purpose data collection
- Case identification
- Risk factor identification
- Hypothesis generation
20Interviewing Methods
- Interviewer Administered
- Face-to-face
- Telephone
- Self Administered
- Mail-out
- Email
- Web-based
- Combination of 1 and 2
21Questionnaire Design
- Interview Method Influenced by
- Length and format of questionnaire
- Question types used in a survey
- Cost considerations for survey implementation
22Sampling
23Sampling
- Sampling is the systematic selection of a
portion of the larger source population. A
sample should be representative of the larger
source population. -
24Sampling
Source Pop Students (12,000)
Sampled pop (150 students)
25Sampling
- Why Sample?
- Because it is more efficient saves time and
money! -
26Sampling
- Sample size
- Is the purpose of the study to determine the
source of the outbreak? - A small number of cases and controls can reveal
risk factors for infection. - Is the purpose of the study to determine the
number of persons who become sick over a specific
period of time attack rate? - A cohort study would require a larger sample.
27Sampling
- Types of Sampling
- Simple Random Sample (SRS)
- Randomly select persons to participate in study.
There are many variations of SRS. - Convenience Sample
- Choose those individuals who are easily
accessible. -
28Sampling
- Problems with Convenience Sampling
- Based on subjective judgment
- Cases may or may not be representative of the
total population - May lead to biased results
29Sampling
- Additional Resources
- http//www.sph.unc.edu/nccphp/training/all_trainin
gs/at_sampl.htm - Sampling Case Studies
- Survey Sampling Precision, Sample Size, and
Conducting a Survey - Survey Sampling Terminology and Methods
30Response Rates
31Response Rates
- Response rates measure the percentage of your
sample that has participated in your survey. - Example
- Using the campus directory, you email a survey
to a random sample of 100 freshmen. 40 of those
students complete the survey and return it
electronically. Your response rate is 40. -
-
32Response Rates
-
- High response rates ensure that survey data are
representative of the source population, and that
results will be valid.
33Response Rates
- Types of Non-response
- Non-contact No one at home
- Refusal to participate
- Inability to participate (due to language barrier
or physical or mental condition)
34Response Rates
- What is an average response rate?
35Response Rates
- Determining Response Rates
- Refer to the American Association of Public
Opinion Research website www.aapor.org - Link to the document titled, Standard
definitions from the home page.
36Interviewer AdministeredData Collection
Considerations
37Interviewer Administered Data Collection
- Advantages and disadvantages of
- face-to-face interviews
- Advantages and disadvantages of telephone
interviews - Advantages and disadvantages of Computer assisted
interviews
38Face-to-Face Interview
- Advantages
- Higher response rate
- Longer survey instrument
- Can have more complex skip patterns
- More accurate recording of responses
- Less item non-response
- Appropriate for hard to reach populations (e.g.,
illiterate, institutionalized)
39Face-to-Face Interview
- Disadvantages
- Costly
- Potential for interviewer error
- Less anonymous than self-administered
- Potential for dishonesty
40Telephone Interview
- Advantages
- Less costly than face-to-face
- Higher response rates than mailed
- Quicker access to participants
- Supervision of interviewers feasible
- Can collect more sensitive information
- Survey design can be more efficient
41Telephone Interview
- Disadvantages
- Lower response rates than face-to-face
- Shorter questionnaires used
- Unable to capture important visual information
(e.g., rash, working conditions) - Under-coverage (e.g., population without phones)
- 2.1 of total population in Virginia
42Computer Assisted Interviewing (CAI)
- CATI Telephone
- CAPI Personal
- ACASI Audio
43CAPI ExampleNC PHRST Teams
-
- NC PHRST Team public health professionals use
PDAs for rapid needs assessment face-to-face
interviews. -
- PDA Personal Digital Assistant, also sometimes
called hand-held computers, palmtops, and pocket
computers -
44Field Data Collection
EPI Info GIS
Wireless WIFI 802.11 or Bluetooth
Field Team 4
Field Team 5
Field Team 1
Field Team 2
Field Team 3
Field data collection using IPAQ Pocket PCs
equipped with GPS, GIS software and data
collection forms.
45(No Transcript)
46(No Transcript)
47vs.
- Pros
- Inexpensive
- No special skills required for data recording
- Cons
- Requires double data-entry
- Greater risk of data errors
- Clipboard and paper more cumbersome in the field
- Pros
- Eliminates double data entry
- Provides routing and direction-finding for field
teams - Improved randomization through GIS
- Ability to quickly analyze and map data
- Cons
- Technology is expensive
- Learning curve / required training for data entry
- Small screen size requires scrolling through many
questionnaire pages
48For More Information. . .
- Steven Ramsey, RS
- Team Leader / Industrial Hygienist
- PHRST-5
- Guilford County Health Department, NC
- (336) -641-8192
49Self AdministeredData Collection Considerations
50Self-administeredData Collection
- Advantages and disadvantages of
- mailed questionnaires
- Advantages and disadvantages of
- Web-based questionnaires
51Mailed Questionnaire
- Advantages
- More anonymous
- May collect more honest responses
- No interviewer error
- Less expensive
- Respondent has more time to think about question
52Mailed Questionnaire
- Disadvantages
- Questionnaire must be simple
- Higher item non-response
- Lower response rate
- Data collection takes more time
- Sample population must be literate
- Coverage / frame deficiencies
53Web-based Questionnaire
- Advantages
- Among some populations, most people may have
access to the Web / email - Inexpensive and fast
- No data entry required
- Improves data quality
- Many vendors send data in a variety of formats
54Web-based Questionnaire
- Disadvantages
- Mandatory access to and experience with Internet
- Potential connection speed and hardware /
software capacity limitations - Potential for multiple responses from one
individual - Potential for responses from non-sampled
respondents - Need email address list to contact sample
55Web-based Questionnaire
- Example Dartmouth University 698 (13.8) of
5060 students had conjunctivitis in spring 2002 - To identify risk factors...
- web-based questionnaire set up
- E-mail sent to 3682 undergraduates
- No data entry - rapid analysis
- 1832 responded (50 response rate)
- -- Source An outbreak of conjunctivitis due
to atypical Streptococcus - pneumoniae. N Engl J Med. 2003348 (12)1112-21.
56Web-based Questionnaire
- For a list of vendors that provide Web-based
survey tools, please visit - http//www.surveymonkey.com/Pricing.asp
57Question and Answer Opportunity
585 minute break
59Standardizing Interviews
60Standardizing Interviews
- The goal of standardization is to help minimize
error, thereby yielding better data quality - Minimizing interviewer error is done through
making surveys more standard or consistent
61Error
- Interviewer Error
- Deviation from expected answer due to the
effects of interviewers.
62Interviewer ErrorExample Gonorrhea outbreak
- Bias
- Interviewers probe on the sexual history
section more among non-whites than whites
- Variance
- A male interviewer may elicit different
responses from a female respondent than a female
interviewer.
63Error
- Additional Resource
- Schwarz, N., Groves, R., and Schuman, H.,
Survey Methods Chapter 4 in Gilbert, D. et al
(Eds) (1998). The Handbook of Social Psychology.
Boston McGraw-Hill pp 143 179.
64Standardizing Interviews
- Contributing Factors
- Question wording
- Interviewer selection
- Interviewer training
- Interviewing procedures
- Supervising interviewers
651. Question Wording
66Question Wording
- Criteria for Standardized Interview Questions
- Must be fully scripted
- Must mean the same thing to every respondent
-
672. Interviewer Selection
68Interviewer Selection
- Criteria for Telephone Interviewer Selection
- Ability to read questions fluently
- Clear and pleasant telephone voice
- Responds quickly to respondents questions
- Reliability
69Criteria for Face-to-FaceInterviewer Selection
- Logistical skills (reading maps)
- Good interpersonal skills
- Independent workers
- Reliability
- In certain circumstances, parallel demographic
characteristics among interviewers and
interviewees
703. Interviewer Training
71Interviewer Training
- Training is NOT optional!
- Trainings must be interactive
- Interviewers must practice reading questions out
loud - Provide support documentation (manual)
72Interviewer TrainingElements
- Purpose of survey
- How to use data collection instrument
- Respondent selection process
- Intent and meaning of each question
- How to record/code responses
- Administering questionnaire
- Addressing participants questions
- Methods for improving response rate
- Tracking calls / completed surveys / call- backs
- Confidentiality
73Interviewer Training
- Respondent Selection Process
- Provide proxy respondent rules for adults and
children because proxy response impacts - Data quality
- Sampling
74Interviewer Training
- Questionnaire Administration
- To establish legitimacy of the survey upon first
contact, tell the respondent - Who is calling
- What is requested
- Why respondent should cooperate
- How respondent was chosen
75Interviewer TrainingLogistics
- Face-to-Face
- Reading maps
- Getting to respondents homes
- Reimbursement
- Dress code
- Scheduling callbacks
- Telephone
- Operation of equipment
- Operation of CATI software (if applicable)
76Interviewer Training
- Other Considerations
- Record some resolution to each question
- Are missing responses due to skip patterns or
errors? -
- Review interview after completion
- Missing responses
- Illegible responses
77Interviewer Training
- Interviewer Manual
- An interviewer manual serves as a reference to
interviewers during interviews and as survey
documentation.
78Interviewer Training
- Suggested Interviewer Manual Contents
- Background information
- Fieldwork
- Interviewing techniques
- Survey instrument terms and definitions
79Interviewer Training Program Example
- Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS)
80BRFSS Interviewer Training
- On-line training covers
- Why BRFSS data are important, how data are used
- Interviewer responsibilities
- Nuts and bolts of the interviewing process
- Interviewing techniques
81BRFSS Interviewer Training
- On-line interviewer training available at
- http//apps.nccd.cdc.gov/BRFSS_Training_Int/overv
iew.asp - General information about BRFSS
http//www.cdc.gov/brfss/ -
824. Interviewing Procedures
83Interviewing Procedures
- Rules
- Read questions exactly as worded
- Probe inadequate answers, if necessary
- Record answers without interviewer discretion
- Maintain rapport with respondents
- Maintain an even pace
84Interviewing Procedures
- Read questions exactly
- Read entire question before accepting an answer
- Clarify questions if necessary
85Interviewing Procedures
- Read questions exactly
- Use only standard definitions / clarification
provided - Use the phrase Whatever x means to you, OR
Whatever you think of as x. - When asked to repeat only one of several response
options, repeat ALL options given for a question
86Interviewing Procedures
- Probe
- A probe is a standardized way to obtain
additional information from a respondent. - Use probes when a respondents answer is unclear
or irrelevant.
87Probe
- Examples of responses requiring a probe
Interviewer "In the past two weeks, have you
been swimming in a public pool? - Irrelevant Response I swam in a lake at a
national park last month." - Unclear Response I stayed in a hotel with a
pool when I was on vacation last week."
88Interviewing Procedures
- Standard Probe Examples
- Repeat the question
- Retrieve receipts / calendars
- What do you mean? How do you mean?
- If respondent has narrowed down answer
- Which would be closer?
- If you had to choose, which would you pick?
89Interviewing Procedures
- Recording Answers
- Do not direct respondent toward an answer
(leading) - Do not assume that an answer received in
passing is correct - Do not skip questions, even if answer was given
earlier - Do not remind respondent of earlier remark if
answer differs from what you expect
90Probing versus Leading
- Example
- Interviewer In the last 7 days, how many times
did you eat prepared food at the dorm cafeteria?
Would you say - None d. 3 times
- Once e. More than 3 times
- Twice
-
- Respondent
- Oh, gee, I didnt go very often . . . maybe a
few times.
91Probing versus Leading
- Example
- Interviewer Probe (correct)
- Which would be closer none, once, twice, 3
times, or more than 3 times? - Interviewer Leading (incorrect)
- So, would you say twice, or three times?
- b. Do you mean twice, or three times?
92Interviewing Procedures
- Maintain Rapport
- An interviewer should be
-
- Nonjudgmental
- Noncommittal
- Objective
93Maintain Rapport
- Any line can be said a thousand ways.
- - BRFSS interviewer training
- Interviewers can put respondents at ease by
doing the following - Read the questions in a friendly, natural manner
- Speak at a moderate rate of speed
- Sound interested
- Strive for a low-pitched voice
94Feedback Helps Maintain Rapport
- Feedback is a statement or action that indicates
to the respondent that s/he is doing a good job. - Give feedback only for acceptable performance -
not good" content. - Give short feedback phrases for short responses,
longer feedback for longer responses. - Specific study information and interviewer
task-related comments can serve as feedback. - Telephone interviewers should give feedback for
acceptable respondent performance 30-50 of the
time.
95Feedback Examples
- I see
- Uh-huh
- Thank you / Thanks
- That is useful / helpful information
- I see, that is helpful to know
- That is useful for our research
- Let me get that down
- I want to make sure I have that right (REPEAT
ANSWER) - We have touched on this before, but I need to
ask every question in the order that it appears
in the questionnaire
96Interviewing Procedures
- Maintain Even Pace
- Pace refers to the rate of progression of the
interview. - Pace can vary by question type.
- Let the respondent set the pace.
97Question and Answer Opportunity
98Activity Correct Interview ProceduresProbing
vs. Leading vs. Feedback
- Completion time 5 minutes
99Activity
- Interviewer Are you still experiencing
Diarrhea? - Respondent 1 Im not sure
- Respondent 2 I definitely had diarrhea last
Tuesday - Respondent 3 Yes
- Activity Instructions
- How should the interviewer respond to these 3
answers? Provide an example of either a
clarification, probe, or feedback that the
interviewer could use. Try to think of one
correct use of each technique.
100Activity
- Suggested Answer
- Respondent 1 Im not sure
- Try a clarification
- For the purposes of this survey, we consider
diarrhea to be 3 or more loose bowel movements in
a 24 hour period.
101Activity
- Suggested Answer
- Respondent 2
- I definitely had diarrhea last Tuesday
- Try a Probe
- OK, but are you still experiencing diarrhea?
102Activity
- Suggested Answer
- Respondent 3 Yes
- Good Feedback I see
- Bad Feedback Are you sure? (leading)
1035. Supervising Interviewers
104Supervising Interviewers
-
- Monitoring, evaluation, and feedback given to
interviewers should focus on the way interviewers
handle the question-answer process.
105Other Supervision Tasks
- Scheduling interviewers
- Number of interviewers needed
- Time calls / visits will be made
- Setting up interview space
- Tracking who has been called and who has not
- Reviewing data from completed interviews
106Confidentiality
107Confidentiality
- Human Subjects Informed Consent
- Outbreak investigations are considered a public
health emergency, with the purpose of identifying
and controlling a health problem. Informed
consent or Institutional Review Board (IRB)
clearance are not required.
108Confidentiality
- Human Subjects Informed Consent
- If further analysis of outbreak investigation
data is conducted for the purpose of research,
IRB approval should be obtained.
109Confidentiality
- Respondent Perspective
- Opening statement of every interview should
indicate that all information collected will be
kept confidential.
110Confidentiality
- Outbreak Investigation Perspective
- Do not discuss details about the outbreak
- Provide only a brief description of the purpose
of the survey at first contact
111Question and Answer Opportunity
1125 minute break
113Guest Lecturer
- Erin Rothney, MPH
- Research Associate
- NC Center for Public Health Preparedness
114Overview
- Provide real-life examples of situations where
you will use interviewing techniques - Face-to-face interviewing
- Telephone interviewing
- Discuss advantages and disadvantages
- Compare interviewing methods
115Face-to-face Interviews
116Community Assessments
- Identify the needs and strengths of a particular
community from several stakeholder perspectives - Include interviewing community members and
observing the environmental and individual
characteristics and community infrastructure - Similar to rapid needs assessments, but completed
within a longer time frame
117Durham, NCCommunity Assessment
- Fall 2002 - Spring 2003
- Bragtown Neighborhood, Durham, NC
- 5 person team
- Interviewed residents and other stakeholders in
Bragtown - 4 page survey, 60 minutes in length
118Durham, NCCommunity Assessment
- Tasks
- Questionnaire design
- Interviewer training
- Interviewing
- Facilitating focus groups
- Analyzing data
- Presenting data to the community
119Survey Instrument
- Question Examples
- Life in the Community
- What do people in Bragtown do for recreation?
- What types of religion are practiced in Bragtown?
- What do people in Bragtown do for a living?
- What political or government organizations exist
in Bragtown? - What different cultural and ethnic groups live in
Bragtown? - How do these different groups interact? Do they
get along? - Community Assets
- What do you like about Bragtown?
- What are some organizations within your community
that positively affect you or your community? - Probe What about political groups,
environmental groups, church groups? - Who are the individuals within your community
that you feel are positive leaders or role
models? - Probe Any others?
120Interviewer Training
- Active listening skills
- Showing empathy
- Using probes
- Practice interviewing, not just reading questions
121Face-to-face Interviews
- Challenges
- Hard to find people at home
- People may not want to invite a stranger into
their home - Costly and time-intensive method of interviewing
- Solutions
- Schedule time ahead by phone or stop by and
schedule more convenient time - Use the skills you learned in interviewer
training to gain trust - Have someone on staff train others on
interviewing techniques carpool set time limits
122Lessons Learned
- Study community demographics and characteristics
before you interview - Train interviewers before an immediate need
- People like to tell you their stories- could lead
to relevant information
123Telephone Interviews2004 E. coli Outbreak
Investigation
124E. coli Outbreak Investigation Telephone
Interviews
- Illness onset October - November 2004
- Geographically dispersed cases in multiple states
- Case-control study
- Train-the-trainer, interviewer
125E. coli Outbreak InvestigationTelephone
Interviews
- Between 3 and 6 interviewers
- Calls made between 3 p.m. and 8 p.m.
- Quality control with one central interviewing
location - News coverage piqued peoples interest in the
outbreak investigation
126Lessons Learned
- Practice reading through the questions and
conducting an interview - The media can be your friend
- Use an introductory script to relate the purpose
of the phone call to the individual quickly - Identify and legitimize the interviewer
- State reasons for conducting the survey
- Assure that responses will be confidential
127Summary
- Telephone
- Outbreak Investigation
- News coverage helped in recruiting people to
participate - Widely distributed sample
- We had the phone numbers of all the people who
pre-bought tickets
- Face-to-face
- Community Assessment
- Establish rapport
- Identify people in a small geographic area
- Assess the environment of the area
128Question and Answer Opportunity
129Session Summary
130Session Summary
- Questionnaire design and interview methods are
interrelated in the overall process of an
outbreak investigation. - The primary purpose of interviews in outbreak
investigations is to collect data for case
identification, risk factor identification, or
hypothesis generation.
131Session Summary
- Interview methods can be interviewer administered
(face-to-face or telephone) or self administered
(mailed, emailed, or Web-based). There are
advantages and disadvantages to employing either
method. - Sampling is the systematic selection of a
representative portion of the larger source
population to be interviewed. If the purpose of
your study is to determine the point source of
infection, you may be able to interview a smaller
sample if the purpose of your study is to
calculate an attack rate, you may need to
interview a larger sample.
132Session Summary
- Survey response rates measure the percentage of
your sample that has participated in your survey.
Average response rates vary from as little as
56 for mailed surveys to 75 for face-to-face
surveys. - Non-response to surveys can be a result of no one
being home, refusal to participate, or individual
inability to participate (e.g., because of a
language barrier or physical or mental
condition).
133Session Summary
- Survey data collection error is a result of both
bias and variance in the interview process. -
- Interviewer error can be prevented with adequate
interviewer training and the standardization of
survey instruments.
134Session Summary
- Develop and distribute an interviewer manual to
provide interviewer support. Such documentation
reduces error and enhances the quality of data
collected. - Sound interviewing procedures include reading
questions exactly as they are worded probing
inadequate answers recording answers without
interviewer discretion and maintaining rapport
with respondents. -
135Next Session November 3rd100 p.m. 300 p.m.
136References and Resources
- American Statistical Association (1997). What Is
a Survey? More About Mail Surveys. Alexandria,
VA Section on Survey Research Methods, American
Statistical Association. - American Statistical Association (1997). What Is
a Survey? How to Collect Survey Data.
Alexandria, VA Section on Survey Research
Methods, American Statistical Association. - Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(2005). Outbreak Management System Demonstration
Web site. http//www.cdc.gov/phin/software-soluti
ons/oms/index.html.
137References and Resources
- Fowler, F. and Mangione, T. (1990).
Standardizing Survey Interviewing. Newbury Park
Sage Publications. - Gregg, M. (ed). (1996). Field Epidemiology.
Oxford University Press. - Holstein, JA and Gubrium, JF. (1997). Active
Interviewing. In Silverman, D. (Ed.) Qualitative
Research Theory, Method, and Practice. London
Sage Publications, pp. 113-129. - Last, J.M. (2001). A Dictionary of Epidemiology
4th Edition. Oxford University Press New York.
138References and Resources
- Levy, P. and Lemeshow, S. (1991). Sampling of
Populations. John Wiley Sons. - Ramsey, S. et al (2005). Using GIS and GPS to
Improve Public Health Response. Guilford County,
NC Health Department Public Health Regional
Surveillance Team 5. - Rubin, HJ and Rubin, IS. (1995). Interviews as
Guided Conversations. Qualitative Interviewing
The Art of Hearing Data. Sage Publications, pp.
1-16, 122-144. - Salant, P. and Dillman, D. (1994). How to
Conduct Your Own Survey. John Wiley Sons.
139References and Resources
- Stehr-Green, J.K. (2002). Gastroenteritis at a
University in Texas Case Study Instructors
Guide. Atlanta, GA U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, Public Health Service,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. - U.S. Census Bureau (2005). Profile of Selected
Housing Characteristics by State Census 2000
Summary File 3 http//factfinder.census.gov/servle
t/QTTable?_bmn_langenqr_nameDEC_2000_SF3_U_DP
4ds_nameDEC_2000_SF3_Ugeo_id04000US51 - Weiss, R.S. (1994). Learning from Strangers The
Art and Method of Qualitative Interview Studies.
New York The Free Press. - Wiggins, B. and Deeb-Sossa, N. (2000).
Conducting Telephone Surveys. Chapel Hill, NC
Odum Institute for Research in Social Science.