Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Developing Calibration Weights and Standard-Error Estimates for a Survey of Drug-Related Emergency-Department Visits Cover

Developing Calibration Weights and Standard-Error Estimates for a Survey of Drug-Related Emergency-Department Visits

Open Access
|Sep 2014

Abstract

This article describes a two-step calibration-weighting scheme for a stratified simple random sample of hospital emergency departments. The first step adjusts for unit nonresponse. The second increases the statistical efficiency of most estimators of interest. Both use a measure of emergency-department size and other useful auxiliary variables contained in the sampling frame. Although many survey variables are roughly a linear function of the measure of size, response is better modeled as a function of the log of that measure. Consequently the log of size is a calibration variable in the nonresponse-adjustment step, while the measure of size itself is a calibration variable in the second calibration step. Nonlinear calibration procedures are employed in both steps. We show with 2010 DAWN data that estimating variances as if a one-step calibration weighting routine had been used when there were in fact two steps can, after appropriately adjusting the finite-population correct in some sense, produce standard-error estimates that tend to be slightly conservative.

Language: English
Page range: 521 - 532
Submitted on: Nov 1, 2012
|
Accepted on: May 1, 2014
|
Published on: Sep 2, 2014
Published by: Sciendo
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2014 Phillip S. Kott, C. Daniel Day, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.