Zimbabwe 2015DHS [message #20248] |
Thu, 15 October 2020 05:26 |
Tawo
Messages: 3 Registered: October 2020
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I am writing an article on the effect of a child's living arrangement on education attainment, focusing on a sample of children living without their biological mothers whose ages range between 7-14 years.
I am using Zimbabwe 2015DHS data and my worry is the huge discrepancy in the percentage of children living without mothers when comparing results from the Birth record files and Personal Record files. From the birth record file, using variable b9, I got 23% of children living without mothers, by using the Personal record and the line for child mother, I got 39% of children living without mothers. the percentage for children whose mother is dead is 8%. Now I failed to find a plausible explanation for the huge discrepancy between the BR and PR files.
Your assistance is greatly appreciated.
Tawo
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Re: Zimbabwe 2015DHS [message #20260 is a reply to message #20254] |
Fri, 16 October 2020 09:57 |
Bridgette-DHS
Messages: 3199 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:
Within DHS we have had some discussion of this inconsistency between the two variables that describe coresidence with the mother, hv112 in the PR file and b9 in the KR and BR files for a child age X.
There are several potential factors, including the following (not necessarily in order of importance): (1) survival of the mothers during the past X years; (2) the cutoff at age 50 of mothers who contribute to the BR file; the omission in the PR, KR, and BR files of mothers who are outside the household population, e.g. working abroad; (4) the omission in the PR file of children who are outside the household population. Other factors may be involved too.
This is indeed an interesting observation. It calls attention to ways in which the KR and BR files systematically omit children whose mothers, at the time of the survey, were not alive or were not in the household population or were not in the age range 15-49. This bias becomes more serious for older children but is probably negligible for children age 0-4, who are used for the MCH indicators.
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Re: Zimbabwe 2015DHS [message #20263 is a reply to message #20260] |
Fri, 16 October 2020 11:24 |
Tawo
Messages: 3 Registered: October 2020
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Member |
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To Tom Pullum, Bridgette, and DHS team.
Thank you for the explanation and clarification on the inconsistency between the two variables that describe coresidence with the mother. My understanding is now clear on the relationship between PR, KR, and BR files.
Regards,
Tawo.
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