Titre : | The validity of self-reported drug use: improving the accuracy of survey estimates |
Auteurs : | L. HARRISON, Éditeur scientifique ; A. HUGHES, Éditeur scientifique |
Type de document : | Rapport |
Mention d'édition : | NIH Publication No. 97-4147 |
Editeur : | Rockville, MD : NIDA, 1997 |
Collection : | Research Monograph, ISSN 1046-9516, num. 167 |
Format : | 514 p. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Discipline : | EPI (Epidémiologie / Epidemiology) |
Mots-clés : |
Thésaurus géographique ETATS-UNISThésaurus mots-clés AUTOEVALUATION ; VALIDITE ; ENQUETE ; METHODE ; MESURES QUALITATIVES ; MESURES QUANTITATIVES ; DEPISTAGE ; PRODUIT ILLICITE ; PHANERES |
Note de contenu : |
CONTENTS:
- Introduction -The validity of self-reported drug use: improving the accuracy of survey estimates (L. Harrison, A. Hughes). - The validity of self-reported drug use in survey research: An overview and critique of research methods (L. Harrison). - The validity of self-reported drug use data: The accuracy of responses on confidential self-administered answer sheets (A.V. Harrell). - The recanting of earlier reported drug use by young adults (L.D. Johnston, P.M. O'Malley). - The reliability and consistency of drug reporting in ethnographic samples (M. Fendrich, M.E. Mackesy-Amiti, J.S. Wislar, P. Goldstein). - New developments in biological measures of drug prevalence (E.J. Cone). - Comparison of self-reported drug use with quantitative and qualitative urinalysis for assessment of drug use in treatment studies (K.L. Preston, K. Silverman, C.R. Schuster, E.J. Cone). - The forensic application of testing hair for drugs of abuse (M.L. Miller, B. Donnelly, R.M. Martz). - Patterns of concordance between hair assays and urinalysis for cocaine: longitudinal analysis of probationers in Pinellas County, Florida (T. Mieczkowski, R. Newel). - The validity of self-reports of drug use at treatment admission and at follow-up: Comparisons with urinalysis and hair assays (E.D. Wish, J.A. Hoffman, S. Nemes). The validity of self-reported cocaine use in two high-risk populations (S. Magura, S.-Y. Kang). Assessing drug use in the workplace: a comparison of self-report, urinalysis, and hair analysis (R.F. Cook, A.D. Bernstein, C.M. Andrews). - Studies of nonresponse and measurement error in the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse (J. Gfroerer, J. Lessler, T. Parsley). - Adaptive sampling in behavioral surveys (S.K. Thompson). - Self-reported drug use: results of selected empirical investigations of validity (Y.-I. Hser). - Design and results of the women's health study (R. Tourangeau, J.B. Jobe, W.F. Pratt, K. Rasinski). - Mode of interview and reporting of sensitive issues: design and implementation of audio computer-assisted self-interviewing (J.T. Lessler, J.M. O'Reilly). - Privacy effects on self-reported drug use: interactions with survey mode and respondent characteristics (W.S. Aquilino). - The use of the psychological laboratory to study sensitive survey topics (G.B. Willis). - Repeated measures estimation of measurement bias for self-reported drug use with applications to the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse (P.P. Biemer, M. Witt). - The use of external data sources and ratio estimation to improve estimates of hardcore drug use from the NHSDA (D. Wright, J. Gfroerer, J. Epstein). |
Domaine : | Drogues illicites / Illicit drugs |
Affiliation : | USA |
Lien : | https://archives.drugabuse.gov/sites/default/files/monograph167_0.pdf |
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