Home » Data » Merging data files » Which DHS File should I use? (Urgent)
Which DHS File should I use? [message #19716] |
Wed, 05 August 2020 04:37 |
Chery87
Messages: 6 Registered: November 2019
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Member |
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Dears,
I am writing a research paper using two different DHS series (Earliest and latest)to study socioeconomic related inequalities (measured by wealth index) of individuals. as I am employing the regression-based decomposition of variables, my questions are presented as follows.
1) which files am I supposed to use in calculating u5mr and linking it with mother's age, household wealth index, mother's level of education, sex of children, sex of household head, residence type, and region?
2) which files am I supposed to use in calculating the stunting rate for children aged 5 years and below and linking it with mother's age, household wealth index, mother's level of education, sex of children, sex of household head, residence type, and region?
3) I want to study the changes of those variables between the earliest and latest DHS and thus, Do I have to merge the DHS files for two different periods or estimation must be done separately?
Looking forward to hear from any one of the experts.
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Re: Which DHS File should I use? [message #19717 is a reply to message #19716] |
Wed, 05 August 2020 08:31 |
Bridgette-DHS
Messages: 3214 Registered: February 2013
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Senior Member |
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Following is a response from DHS Research & Data Analysis Director, Tom Pullum:
The survival of a child, and whether a living child is stunted, etc., are characteristics of the child. Child survival is indicated by b5 in the KR or BR file. Stunting, etc. is calculated from hw70-hw72 in the KR file because it is only available for (surviving) children age 0-4. It can also be calculated from hc70-hc72, in the PR file. The PR file includes all children age 0-4 identified in the household survey. The PR file includes anthropometry for some children who are not in the KR file. The KR file includes those children in the PR file whose mother was alive and in the same household.
To get a rate you have to pool the survival information about, say all the children in urban areas and all the children in rural areas. A rate is not multivariate. DHS reports include child mortality rates for sub groups, and that is done by calculating the mortality rate over and over within each sub group. Similarly, the percentage stunted is calculated within subgroups.
For multivariate analysis you can just work with a binary (0 or 1) outcome--for survival or stunting, for example, and logit regression. That's what I would recommend.
If you want to look at change between two surveys in the same country, or you want to look at differences between two surveys, you can put them into the same data file, but have codes such as survey=1 and survey=2 when you want to describe or test a difference. This is appending, not merging.
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Re: Which DHS File should I use? [message #19799 is a reply to message #19787] |
Mon, 17 August 2020 01:44 |
Chery87
Messages: 6 Registered: November 2019
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Member |
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Dear,
Thank you very much for the recommendations, I already know and accessed them. I want to estimate myself and finally I have figured out how to do it.
I may come back in the future if I need your technical support.
regards,
Chery
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