Reason for household subsampling for men [message #11496] |
Mon, 02 January 2017 16:07 |
kokbent
Messages: 1 Registered: January 2017
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Hi,
I'm currently working on the Malaria data in the West African countries. I'm using standard DHS dataset. One of the issue I have is about half of the <5 years old children were not tested for Malaria.
I found out that the reason can be attributed to the sampling methods, whereby only 50% of the household surveyed was selected for male survey, and only these household was subjected to malaria screening, among other surveys (anaemia, height weight info and etc). Thus far, I know at least Ghana and Cote d'Ivoire have this type of method and I'm sure other countries such as Guinea, Mali and Toga used similar subsampling method.
I couldn't seem to find the underlying reason behind such subsampling methods, can anyone point me to the right documents that explain why subsampling was conducted to only the male survey (and hence the haemoglobin module) instead of female survey? was it to plainly reduce number of sample to a manageable size? Or is there a cultural or household structural significance to this?
Thank you very much and happy new year by the way :)
Ben
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