Edited corrections

master
Vikas Rawal 4 years ago
parent 1bbc2be089
commit 5a15b43ae4

@ -67202,7 +67202,7 @@ pages = {34-46},
year = {2014}, year = {2014},
issn = {0167-6296}, issn = {0167-6296},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167629614000083}, url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167629614000083},
author = {Gustav Kjellsson and Philip Clarke and Ulf-G. Gerdtham}, author = {Kjellsson, Gustav and Clarke, Philip and Gerdtham, Ulf-G},
keywords = {Survey methods, Health survey, Hospitalization, Recall error, Recall periods}, keywords = {Survey methods, Health survey, Hospitalization, Recall error, Recall periods},
abstract = {Self-reported data on health care use is a key input in a range of studies. However, the length of recall period in self-reported health care questions varies between surveys, and this variation may affect the results of the studies. This study uses a large survey experiment to examine the role of the length of recall periods for the quality of self-reported hospitalization data by comparing registered with self-reported hospitalizations of respondents exposed to recall periods of one, three, six, or twelve months. Our findings have conflicting implications for survey design, as the preferred length of recall period depends on the objective of the analysis. For an aggregated measure of hospitalization, longer recall periods are preferred. For analysis oriented more to the micro-level, shorter recall periods may be considered since the association between individual characteristics (e.g., education) and recall error increases with the length of the recall period.} abstract = {Self-reported data on health care use is a key input in a range of studies. However, the length of recall period in self-reported health care questions varies between surveys, and this variation may affect the results of the studies. This study uses a large survey experiment to examine the role of the length of recall periods for the quality of self-reported hospitalization data by comparing registered with self-reported hospitalizations of respondents exposed to recall periods of one, three, six, or twelve months. Our findings have conflicting implications for survey design, as the preferred length of recall period depends on the objective of the analysis. For an aggregated measure of hospitalization, longer recall periods are preferred. For analysis oriented more to the micro-level, shorter recall periods may be considered since the association between individual characteristics (e.g., education) and recall error increases with the length of the recall period.}
} }
@ -67219,8 +67219,8 @@ abstract = {Self-reported data on health care use is a key input in a range of s
} }
@article{doi:10.1185/03007990902774765, @article{doi:10.1185/03007990902774765,
author = {Donald E. Stull and Nancy Kline Leidy and Bhash author = {Stull, Donald E. and Leidy, Nancy Kline and Parasuraman, Bhash
Parasuraman and Olivier Chassany}, and Chassany, Olivier},
title = {Optimal Recall Periods for Patient-reported title = {Optimal Recall Periods for Patient-reported
Outcomes: Challenges and Potential Solutions}, Outcomes: Challenges and Potential Solutions},
journal = {Current Medical Research and Opinion}, journal = {Current Medical Research and Opinion},

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