Title: Sampling Issues for Telephone Surveys in Scotland
1Sampling Issues for Telephone Surveys in Scotland
- Gerry Nicolaas
- Survey Methods Unit
- National Centre for Social Research
- 13 January 2004
- email G.Nicolaas_at_NatCen.ac.uk
2This session will focus on
- Surveys of the general population
- Probability sampling
3Potential sampling advantages of telephone
interviewing
- No need for geographical clustering.
- Inclusion of more remote areas.
- Cheaper recalls
4Telephone methods are not widely used in the UK
for social surveys among the general population
5Obstacles to selecting a representative and
unbiased probability sample of the general
population
- Households with no telephone
- Unlisted telephone numbers
- Mobile phones
6(1) Households without telephone
- Proportion of households with no phone in
Scotland declined from 5 in 1998 to less than
0.5 in 2002. - Households with no phone tend to belong to the
most socially and economically deprived groups. - The exclusion of households with no phone would
not introduce notable bias in a general
population survey.
Source Taylor, 2003
7(2) Unlisted telephone numbers
- In 1998 26 of telephone owning households (fixed
lines) in Scotland were ex-directory - Households with unlisted phone numbers tend to
be - - Smaller than average
- - Headed by someone in social classes IV or V
Source Beerten and Martin, 1999
8(3) Mobile phones
- Proportion of households in Scotland with at
least one mobile phone increased from 13 in 1998
to 80 in 2002 - 5 of households only have mobile phone
- Mobile phone owners without a fixed line tend to
be younger, lower socio-economic group,
lower income, unemployed. - Mobiles tend to be not listed in phone
directories. - Mobile phone numbers cant be linked to geogr.
area. - Mobiles belong to individual rather than
household.
Source Taylor, 2003 Ofcom 2003
9Sampling from telephone directories
- Select samples systematically or use random
numbers to select page numbers and phone numbers. - Non-coverage of
- - households with no telephone,
- - households with only mobile phones,
and - - households with unlisted telephone
numbers. - Coverage about 65 of Scottish population.
- Under-representation of
- - most socially economically
deprived groups, - - young mobile people,
- - people living in small households.
10Plus digit sampling
- Sample is selected from the telephone directory
and a fixed number is added to the last digit. - Similar procedure replaces the last one or more
digits with a random number. - Sample will include unlisted numbers, but
- - proportion of unlisted numbers is lower than in
the population - - profile of the achieved sample reflects that of
listed telephones rather than that of all
telephones - - probabilities of selection are unknown vary
because of unequal distribution of listed
unlisted numbers.
11Random Digit Dialling (RDD)
- RDD uses comprehensive list of of valid area
codes and prefixes and adds randomly generated
suffixes. - OFCOM database of blocks of 10,000 numbers
- e.g. 0131 557 xxxx
- All telephone households have a known non-zero
chance of selection (fixed telephones and
mobiles). - Exclusion of households without phone will not
introduce notable bias - But High proportion of non-working numbers and
other ineligibles (e.g. business) about 80
Sources http//www.ofcom.org.uk/working_w_ofcom/
numbers/numbers_administered/?a87101geog1 Nicola
as and Lynn (2002)
12RDD hit rates can be improved
- Advanced telephony systems can screen out most
non-working numbers - RDD samples can be matched against yellow pages
to remove listed business numbers - Adopt sample designs that improve hit rate,
- - Mitofsky-Waksberg two-stage method
- - List-assisted methods
13Should mobile phone numbers be included in RDD
sample?
- Exclusion of mobile phone numbers will result in
under-coverage of younger people, lower
socio-economic group, lower income group, the
unemployed. - Inclusion of mobile phone numbers will result in
further reduction in effective sample size due to
post-weighting of households with more than one
phone (fixed mobile) - Inclusion of mobile phone numbers will increase
ineligibles for surveys covering areas smaller
than UK (e.g. Scotland).
14Dual frame sampling
- E.g, a sample of listed telephone numbers
supplemented with a RDD sample. - Directory status of each RDD interview must be
known - Sampling administration is more complicated.
- Data to be combined using post-stratified
dual-frame estimators. - Unclear whether this approach is feasible and
whether the gains are worthwhile.
15Single frame, dual mode approach
- Use a frame with good coverage (e.g. PAF)
- Telephone interviews for those sampled cases with
a matched telephone number. - Postal questionnaires or face-to-face interviews
for those without a matched telephone number. - But
- - low matching rates
- - costly if unmatched cases interviewed
face-to-face - - relatively low response rates if postal
questionnaires are sent to unmatched cases - - possibility of mode effects.
16Conclusion
- None of the sampling methods are perfect.
- Choice of sampling method depends on specific
survey. - On the whole, RDD appears to be superior method
- - Complete coverage of all households with
phones. - - Non-coverage of households without phone can be
ignored - - Sampling frame is accurate (Ofcom database).
- - Precision of estimates is high (unclustered
sample). - - Relatively cheap and easy to select RDD sample.
- - Fieldwork efficiency can be improved.
- But the proportion of mobile only households
needs to be monitored. - Response rates?
17Another sampling issue Respondent selection
- Include all eligible household members or select
one at random with post weighting for unequal
selection probabilities. - Random selection of one eligible household member
tends to be most common approach for telephone
surveys - Gold standard is Kish Method but some claim
this requires too much info up front and may
reduce response. - Most common method is Last/Next Birthday method.
- NatCen experiment showed no significant
difference between the two methods in response
rates nor sample compositions.
Source Tipping Nicolaas (2001)
18Suggested reading
- Beerten Martin (1999) Household ownership of
telephones and other communication links
implications for telephone surveys. Surv.
Methodol. Bull., 44 1-7. - Collins (1999) Sampling for UK telephone surveys.
JRSS(A) 162 1-4. - Collins Sykes (1987) The problems of
non-coverage and unlisted telephone numbers in
telephone surveys in Britain. JRSS(A) 150(3)
241-253 - Lepkowski (1988) Telephone sampling methods in
the United States. In Groves et al (eds),
Telephone Survey Methodology. John Wiley and
Sons New York - Nicolaas Lynn (2002) Random-digit dialling in
the UK viability revisited. JRSS(A) 165
297-316. - Taylor, S. (2003) Telephone surveying for
household social surveys the good, the bad and
the ugly. Surv. Methodol. Bull., 52 10-21. - Tipping Nicolaas (2001) Respondent selection
procedures for telephone surveys. Survey Methods
Newsletter, 21(1) 4-7, Nat. Centre for Soc. Res.