Title: Emergency Room Survey
1Emergency Room Survey
- Survey Planning, Administration and Cost
2SIDUC AN INTEGRATED SYSTEM OF DRUG USE SURVEYS
Key Informants
FORENSIC MEDICINE
Detention Centers
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
JUVENILE OFFENDERS
EMERGENCY ROOMS
STUDENT SURVEYS
TREATMENT CENTERS
3SIDUC STANDARDIZATION
4EMERGENCY ROOMS
- Population of reference
- Patients of Emergency Rooms.
- Analyzed population
- a) all patients b) typical weeks. Judgmental
sample. - Method of data collection
- Interview laboratory analysis.
5FORENSIC MEDICINE
- Population of reference
- Death by accident, homicide, suicide.
- Analyzed Population
- a) all , b) Typical weeks.
- Method of data collection
- Autopsy and laboratory analysis.
6Steps to be Taken
- A funding source or multiple sources must be
found (or no survey) - Decisions must then be made about who will direct
the research undertaking - What types of expert and staff support will be
needed, and - What is a realistic timetable
- for the overall endeavor
- for the major components
7Session Outline
- Core Survey Activities
- Personnel
- Budget
- Schedule
8Core Activities
- Establishment of Advisory Committee
- Develop Proposal
- Seek Permission to conduct
- Finalize Methodology
- Training
- Survey Implementation
- Data Collection, Handling, Analysis, Report
Writing
9Advisory Committee
- Stakeholders identification/representation
- Ministry of Health
- Public Hospital Authority
- ER Director
- Police
- Ministry of Transport
- Rep from private hospital
- COB Research Unit
- N.Bgt Can avoid problems at the end
- Can help to sell the survey
10Communications Regarding Survey
- Ministerial Responsibility (CMO)
- Institutional Responsibility
- Public Hospital Authority (PMH, RMH)
- Institutional Review Boards/Ethics Comm.
- How to contact the chosen hospitals
- Administrator
- ER Manager
11Contact With Selected Institutions
- Step 1
- An introductory letter to the Administrator,
informing him/her of the study and its purposes.
It will also - Ask to inform the ER Manager of decision
- Step 2
- Contact the ER manager via telephone to confirm
that everything is in order just prior. At this
point
12Project Personnel
- Lead Investigator(s)
- Core Staff
- Site managers
- Data Managers
- Data Collection Staff
- Doctors
- Nurses
- Medical Records Clerks
- Consultant(s)
13Personnel Selection Process Options
- Advisory Committee to provide oversight of the
enterprise and the selection of the lead
investigators - AD can help to engage people or organizations
needed to fund, conduct, or make use of the
research - DIS too many cooks in the kitchen and may
introduce political considerations into the
process - REC committee should deal with the broad policy
and financial issues and leave the scientific
decisions to the scientists - Recruitment of one or more individuals to run the
project - Individual researchers may take the initiative to
conduct such a survey
14Lead Investigator
- Ideally will be a part of the activity from
beginning to end - Will provide the planning and integration needed
to be sure that the end product matches the needs
and objectives - Should be trained social scientists with some
experience in survey research techniques
15Core Staff(Site Managers)
- These key individuals will remain with the study
for its duration - Participate in various activities and make sure
that they are carried out according to plan. - Most likely will supervise various components of
the study, under the general direction of the
lead investigator(s) - Should be well educated and preferably have some
experience with research activities.
16Data Collection Staff
- Decide whether the data will be collected by
individuals from outside the hospitals or not - ER Staff If the patients will trust the MDs or
Nurse to protect their confidentiality - Outside Staff If the staffing situation presents
a challenge, then staff members must be hired,
trained, supervised and usually compensated - trained health social workers, trained field
interviewers from a survey research organization,
university students, etc
17Consultants
- Overall Planning
- To direct technical assistance at various stages,
depending of course on the areas of expertise of
the lead investigators - If the lead investigators are new to this area of
research, consider a short-term consultation with
an experienced expert in the initial planning
stage, again at the analysis planning stage, and
perhaps at the interpretation stage - If brought in from abroad, seek the assistance
and support of one of the international
organizations that deal with the control of drug
abuse (UNODC, OAS) - Sample Planning
- Consultation with a sampling statistician also is
likely to be very helpful, again at an early
point in the planning effort - Statistical Analysis
- If neither a general consultant from the
substance abuse field nor statistician is able to
help on data analyses, seek an expert on
statistical analyses. - The job is usually not to actually conduct the
analyses but to advise on the choice of analyses
and appropriate computer programs for conducting
them.
18Budget Planning
- Personnel Costs
- Non-Personnel Costs
19Factors that May Impact Personnel Budget
- Labor costs in the country
- Whether it is necessary to use data collection
staff from outside the hospitals - The method of data entry
- The need for technical assistance
- The size of the sample needed and the size of the
country across which that sample will be spread - influence both staff and travel costs
- Amount of the personnel assigned to plan and
conduct the ER survey who are already on the
payroll of a participating agency.
20Sample Budget Outline
PERSONNEL COSTS Lead investigators Field staff (if applicable) for __ weeks Supervisors/Site Manager Facilitators/MDs, Nurse, Med Rec. Core support staff Secretarial/Clerical Subcontractor Costs For data entry (if applicable) For any other services being purchased Consultants Fringe benefits NON-SALARY COSTS Office Rental (if applicable) Furniture (if applicable) Equipment (as needed) Phones, Fax, Copy machine, Computers Supplies Telephone service Advertising/Recruiting Costs Printing Questionnaires Manuals Brochures, instruction sheets, etc. Final report Shipping and postage Questionnaires to hospitals Questionnaires back from hospitals Other Travel Costs For investigators For field staff (if applicable) Overhead charges (if any)
21Estimated Budget for Bahamas Emergency Room Drug
Survey
22Estimated Budget for Bahamas Emergency Room Drug
Survey (Contd)
23Survey Scheduling
24Scheduling Tips
- Considerable time and expense can be saved by
undertaking several streams of activity
simultaneously - Anticipating which efforts need to be completed
before the next steps can proceed - Schedule should not be too abbreviated as there
may be some unexpected developments - Effort should be made to make realistic estimates
of the time necessary to complete each line of
activity - Field staff should not be promised work until the
investigators actually expect to proceed with the
data collection (increased costs)
25Survey Scheduling
- Hospital Recruitment
- Data Collection
- Analysis and reporting
- Dissemination and utilization activities
26Scheduling Hospital Recruitment
- If participation is decided by central edict
(Ministry of Health), the process may be fairly
rapid. - If involved in the planning, this assures their
willingness to cooperate - If the individual hospitals or hospital
authorities have the authority to decline
cooperation, the process of securing cooperation
can be a substantial and time-consuming one. - Investigator(s) may have to write to each
hospital administrator inviting participation - Conduct a follow-up call (or possibly a series of
calls) to urge the hospitals participation and
answer questions - Communicate with higher authorities, if their
approval is also required.
27Scheduling Data Collection
- Once the main data collection is proceeding, the
responsible investigators should be monitoring
carefully the quality of the data being
collected, to be sure that those collecting it in
the field are following instructions, and to
identify problems early that might be rectified. - Plans can also be underway for how the data is to
be collected and forwarded and how the returned
data are to be coded and/or edited - Also, the investigators can begin planning the
analyses that they would like to conduct at the
completion of data collection and data cleaning.
28Scheduling Analysis and Reporting
- Often not accorded the attention that they
deserve because not enough time and resources
were set aside for them at the outset of the
study. - Be sure to leave a significant interval for the
analysis, interpretation, and writing of results. - At this late stage, normally only the lead
investigator(s) and an analyst or two are still
needed on the study staff, perhaps in addition to
a secretary.
29Scheduling Dissemination and Utilization
Activities
- Once the report is completed, arrangements should
be made to get it into the hands of people likely
to be influenced by its results. - The lead investigators may wish to meet with
certain groups, or make presentations to
particular audiences to whom the work has
relevance. - Policy and programmatic level
30Flow Chart of Activities for the Conduct of a
School Survey
 INSTRUMENT DEVELOPMENT AND REFINEMENT Develop questionnaire ? Pretest questionnaire ? Pilot test questionnaire field procedures ? Make final revisions to questionnaire field procedures PERSONNEL Select lead investigators ? Hire core staff   FIELD PREPARATIONS Develop field procedures ? Hire and train field staff (if applicable) ? Develop instruction manual for survey leaders  SAMPLE HOSPITAL RECRUITMENT Design sampling plan ? Secure data for selecting hospital sample ? Draw sample of hospitals ? Recruit the sampled hospitals ? Schedule the data collection in each hospital
31Flow Chart of Activities for the Conduct of a
E.R. Survey
CONDUCTING THE MAIN SURVEY Conduct full data collection ? Code/clean/edit questionnaires ? Enter data ? Build computer file ? Conduct data analyses ? Write reports ? Disseminate/utilize results
32Ethical Considerations
- Data must remain completely confidential or
completely anonymous - no identifying information on a patients
questionnaire - If specific identifying information for the
individual is contained on the questionnaires
de-identify at the earliest possible stage - Store the personally identifying information
separately from the answers to the rest of the
questionnaire with some type of link system - Avoid publicly identifying individual hospitals
if possible - Permission to participate at all levels
- Commitment to use results
33Emergency Room Survey
- QUESTIONNAIRE DEVELOPMENT
34Factors That Impact Final Content
- Amount of time the medical staff can afford to
make available in an AE setting - Quality, completeness
- Treatment Vs Prevention
- SIDUC Rules
- Possibility of including other topics due to cost
sharing with other agencies - Ability of respondents to complete the
questionnaire - Complexity should not exceed respondents
capabilities
35Levels of Priority
Highly Recommended Necessary to achieve objectives. Questions likely to be important to almost any epidemiology study of substance use
Recommended Those that should be given very serious consideration Risk and Protective Factors Other sources Injury Surv. Questions from Stakeholders
Optional May not measure concepts of vital interest in every study
36Sequence and Priority of Elements In The
Questionnaire
- Introduction
- Background and demographic characteristics
- Age, Gender, Employment, Occupation
- Use of alcohol
- Use of illicit substances
- Use of controlled substances
37List of Drugs
Alcohol Cocaine HCl. Coca Paste
Marijuana Tranquilizers Methamphetamines
Solvents and Inhalants Sedatives Flunitrazepam (Rohypnol, etc)
Hallucinogens Amphetamines Crack Cocaine
Heroine Anticholinergics Ecstasy
Opium/Morphine Anti-depressants Other
38Defining Drugs For The Respondent
- Names and descriptions must be reviewed to see if
they are appropriate in the cultural setting in
which they will be asked. - The main point is that the names used accurately
communicate to respondents which substance(s)
should be included in what they report, and which
substances should not, and under what
circumstances. - To determine a list of appropriate slang or
street names for various drugs, the investigators
may want to speak with treatment professionals
and known drug users in the age group under
study. - If a longer question stem is required to get the
definition clarified for your respondents, then
that may be justified. (See SIDUC Manual) - For legally prescribed drugs, it is important
that the respondents understand what occasions of
use they should and should not report in
answering the questions.
39Definition of Drugs
Formal Name Street Name
Cocaine Coke, crack, white lady, blow, etc.
Marijuana Weed, herb, grass, refer, pot, ganja, etc.
40Example of A Stem Change
Concern General question Vs specific questions that will ensure that all questions are answered by all respondents Concern General question Vs specific questions that will ensure that all questions are answered by all respondents
Original (OAS) Change
Have you taken any drugs within the 6 hours preceding your injury Have you taken any of the following within the 6 hours preceding your injury Alcohol Marajuana etc
41Layout In The Event of Lab Confirmation
- Blind Vs Not Blind
- If Not, questions and Lab results on same form
- No means to connect necessary
- IF blind, questions and lab results are separated
- Unique identifiers are needed to re-unite
- NB identifiers can be added after AE but before
transfer to lab
42Other Useful Suggestions
- Skip patterns are more difficult for respondents
to follow correctly than a simple, uninterrupted
series of questions therefore, it is advised
that they be minimized. - Pre-test by getting a limited number of like
respondents to complete the questionnaire. - Determine average time to complete.
- individually interview them about whether the
instructions were clear and whether there were
any questions or answers that they had difficulty
understanding or using. - Determine if they understood each class of drug
43Other Useful Suggestions Contd
- Pilot testing to
- see how the actual administration procedures in
the ER will go, - see how long it takes the patients to answer the
questions and - identify remaining problems in the content and
clarity of the questionnaire.
44Emergency Room Survey
- Data Collection Procedure
45Decisions Prior to Collection
- WHAT What data will be collected
- WHO Who will be responsible for data
collection - WHEN When to collect data to ensure a normal
sample - WHERE What hospitals are to be included
- HOW How to conduct all aspects of survey
administration
46What data will be collected
- Questionnaires
- SIDUC
- Bahamas
- Lab confirmation data
- Site reports on
- refusals
- ineligibles
47Who will be responsible for data collection
- Conducting the interview of each section of the
questionnaire - How to select survey leaders
- AE Data Flow
- Lab sample flow
- routinely collected information
- Ensuring that a continuous supply of
questionnaires are available - Ensuring a continuous supply of lab sampling
equipment are available (?) - Ensuring that completed forms and lab samples are
routed properly
48Selection of Survey Leader
- ER Staff
- Pros
- already in the ER
- know the ER and are familiar with ER routines
- Patients may feel more comfortable with MD or
Nurse - least expensive
- Cons
- Competing interests
- ER Services Vs survey completion
- Research Assistant
- Pros
- More consistency across hospitals
- Cons
- More expensive
- doubts regarding the ability to convince patients
to participate - E.g., Social Workers in Haiti
49When to collect data
- SIDUC - Sample
- Vs
- Institutionalized routinely collected as part
of diagnosis
50Timing of Data Collection
- It is important to choose a period which should
not be preceded by any holiday, ensuring that the
patients refer to a normal week or month when
answering the questionnaire - If more than one hospital is included, it is a
must to administer the data collection at the
same time in all hospitals - In the event of inter-country comparisons
(SIDUC), the time of data collection must be as
similar as possible since the use of alcohol and
other drugs vary at certain identifiable periods. - e.g. December (Christmas) ?
- January (Recuperation) ?
- Holidays ?
- Lent ?
51Where will data collection take place
- Geographic location
- Islands
- Hospitals
- Public
- Princess Margaret (Nassau)
- Rand Memorial (Freeport)
- Private
- Doctors (Nassau)
52Activities During Administration
- Instructions to the Survey Data Collection Staff
- Instructions to the patients
- Stress anonymity and confidentiality
53Who Should Complete Survey
- Inclusion Criteria
- Exclusion Criteria
- Persons lt 12 years of age
- Gynae patients
- Language barriers (Non-English speaking)
- Unconscious patients (?)
- If hospitalized and no identifiers to follow-up
54Patients who Refuse
- Concern is due to the possible association
between refusal and drug use - It is important that the number of refusals be
documented - Could compare refusals from low and high
prevalence areas - It is important that refusals are treated in the
same way in all participating hospitals and
countries.
55Survey AdministrationInstructions to Patients
-
- Survey Instructions can be written on the front
page of the questionnaire and should include
information on - The purpose of the study (If not incorporated
into the system) - The selection of patients (All selected during
study period) - The study is anonymous and/or confidential
- Steps to ensure anonymity
- Participation is important but if not willing,
that is their choice
56To Ensure Anonymity
- Following SIDUC Method
- Questionnaires should not contain any identifiers
- Name
- hospital record , etc.
57Survey AdministrationReport
- A report should be completed (periodically) by
the survey leader - Total number of refusals
- If the study only targets a specific group, the
number of those excluded
58Checklist For Data Collection
- Chose a survey leader trusted by the patients
- Instructions to the survey leader
- Describe how to treat patients not belonging to
the target population - Describe how to treat refusals
- Careful planning of the contacts with selected
institutions - Safe transportation of material (lab component)
- Detailed planning of the survey administration,
including - stress anonymity and confidentiality
- instructions to the survey leader
- instructions to the patients
- Shift report
59Overview of Methodological Issues
60Overview of Session
- Representativeness the extent to which a sample
mirrors the population of interest - Reliability the extent to which repeated
measurements used under the same conditions
produce the same result - Validity the extent to which answers are
accurate representations of the underlying
reality that they are intended to measure
61Factors that Influence Representativeness
- The sampling method
- The size of the sample
- Response rate The number of eligible non-gynae
emergency room patients that agree to participate
in the survey
62The Method of Sampling Target Population
- The target population in the Emergency Room
survey is, by definition, persons who chose to
come to the emergency room and excluding other
individuals who, for whatever reason, chose not
to attend. - Beware that all injured persons do not come in
due to a number of reasons (choice,
inaccessibility, etc.) - Less-severely injured persons who do not come in
may be the result of reasons related to substance
use - Large differences in emergency room attendance
(access, availability) between countries may make
it difficult/impossible to make meaningful
international comparisons
63Method of Achieving Representativeness
- Random sampling is fundamental to obtaining a
sample that is representative of the population - OR
- Sample the entire target group
64Sample Size and Representativeness
- the number of sampled patients must be of
sufficient size - considerations must be given to the extent of the
analysis of drug habits in different subgroups - always important to sample enough patients to be
able to analyse data separately for males and
females - Response rate must be sufficiently high to enable
representative data to be obtained
65Categories of Response Rates
- Institutional Cooperation
- Public and Private Hospitals
- Patient Cooperation For Interview
- Proportion Participating in Lab Analysis
66Issues Impacting Institutional Cooperation
- An increased number of proposed surveys has made
hospitals in some countries somewhat reluctant to
allow patients to participate directly in such
surveys - highlights the necessity of approaching
institutions with emergency rooms formally and in
a way that makes them feel that they are part of
an important study
67Issues Impacting Patient Participation
- Participation should always be voluntary
- Suspicions regarding True objectives has made
patients somewhat reluctant to take time to
participate in such drug surveys - highlights the necessity of approaching patients
in a way that makes them feel that they are part
of an important study - All questionnaires should be treated
confidentially - The use of questionnaires without names or other
kinds of identification - Guaranties of confidential treatment of
questionnaires and data - Promises not to report data for individual
patients
68Decisions Regarding Non-Participation
- If hospitals with a large percentage of overall
ER visits refuse to participate it is essential
to do a careful analysis of the reasons - If systematic errors is suspected, interpretation
might be difficult and international comparisons
may be jeopardised. - E.g.
- refusing patients come from areas where drug
and/or alcohol consumption is known to be high
69Reliability
-
- The extent to which repeated measurements used
under the same conditions produce the same result - Or
- Whether an indicator is consistent across time
and observers
70Methods of Measuring Survey Reliability
- To conduct repeated studies using same
methodology - By using data from different questions within a
questionnaire - Laboratory Confirmation
71- Factors Influencing Study Reliability
- Completeness - proportion of total information
known - All respondents answer questions
- All targeted respondents take survey
- Sources of Error
- Instrument
- Person
- MD, Nurse, Med. Rec Clerk
- Study Subject or Respondent
- May occur at
- subject selection
- data collection (Subjective)
- Kappa Statistic
- analysis and interpretation
72Sources of Error Instrument and Procedures
- Poor selection of questions and variables (SIDUC)
- Ambiguous questions (additional questions)
- Non-response
- Poor selection of study subjects (friendliest)
- Failure to validate measurements, recordings
- lab
73- Sources of Error
- Person
- Interviewer
- Inter-observer variation
- the way medical staff explain and/or ask
questions - Opinions on extent drug/alcohol use contributed
to injury - Subject
- Inter-subject variation
- Different Interpretation of questions (what drugs
were thought of without prompting) - willingness, survey environment
74To Achieve Reliable Data
- Thorough knowledge of study population
- Unbiased selection of study subjects
- Standardized, calibrated and consistent
instrument(s) - Clear, unambiguous questions
- Minimal personal discomfort or discomfiture
- Interviewers, recorders thoroughly and equally
well trained - Need to validate
75Validity
- The extent to which answers are accurate
representations of the underlying reality that
they are intended to measure. - In the context of emergency room surveys, the
degree to which the questionnaire measures the
aspects of patients drug consumption that it was
intended to measure.
76Strategies to Enhance Validity
- Studies must guarantee anonymity and
confidentiality - One is to use a data collection leader trusted by
the patients - Stress anonymity during the introduction
- no names or other identification marks should be
on the questionnaire (SIDUC) - The patients must also have enough time to answer
the questionnaire - important that the questionnaire is not too long
- They must understand the questions
- They must be willing to answer the questions
honestly
77Strategies to Assess Validity
- Patients willingness to co-operate
- Patients comprehension
- Missing data rates
- Logical consistency
- Reported willingness to answer honestly
- The cultural context in which a survey is
conducted
78Strategies to Assess Validity Cultural Context
- Questions must be culturally or locally
appropriate - Use the appropriate street-names or nicknames
used for different drugs - Willingness to admit drug use may be influenced
by the attitudes towards drugs in a given society - perceived risk of substance use, disapproval of
different kinds of substance use and the
availability of different drugs differ between
countries. - Low availability Negative attitude less
willing to admit - High availability Positive attitudes more
willing to admit - Survey Tradition
- Persons in countries where surveys are less
common may feel less comfortable answering
questions about sensitive behaviours.
79Checklist For Survey Methodology
- Representativeness
- Define the target population
- Assess the importance of non-students in the same
age groups as the target population - Decide a proper time for the data collection (if
international comparisons are planned) - Assess the importance of non-participating
schools/classes - Assess the importance of non-participating
students - Reliability
- Assess reliability (whenever possible by using
data in the questionnaire)
80Checklist For Survey Methodology Contd
- Validity
- Anonymous and confidential data collection
- Measure and report
- Number of eliminated questionnaires
- Survey leader information (from the classroom
report) - Time to answer the questionnaire
- Proportion of unanswered questions
- Logical consistency
- Possible use of a willingness question
- Possible reported use of a dummy drug
- Construct validity
81The End
82Really