Struggling finding cervical cancer variables [message #27647] |
Wed, 13 September 2023 13:31 |
do141
Messages: 2 Registered: September 2023
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Hello,
Thank you very much for your time. I'm following along this tutorial https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/rdhs/vignettes/intro duction.html on basic rdhs regression analysis but struggling with a few parts:
I would like my variables to be related cervical cancer screening which I found were s1423, s1424, s1426 in BJIR and s1323, s1324, and s1326 in MDIR. However, I cannot find the broader variable in the recode file (the example uses hml35 (result of malaria rapid test)? Do you know why these variables are labeled differently in BJIR71FL and MDIR81FL?
Thank you
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Re: Struggling finding cervical cancer variables [message #27665 is a reply to message #27647] |
Fri, 15 September 2023 17:38 |
Janet-DHS
Messages: 880 Registered: April 2022
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Senior Member |
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Following is a response from DHS staff member, Tom Pullum:
Variables with a prefix s in the IR and KR files, or a prefix sh in the PR files, are "special" or "survey-specific". Because they are not standard, they don't have the same variable names wherever they appear. Often such questions eventually do become standardized. For example, questions about early child development are now standard but for several years they appeared with variable names and even coding structures that varied considerable from one survey to another.
Questions about chronic diseases are going through a similar evolution. I predict that eventually they will have a standard wording, coding, and names, but until then, you have to do some searching to find them. In Stata you can open a file and then, for example, enter "lookfor cancer" and you will find the variables that have "cancer" in the variable label.
If you are looping through surveys and want to do the same kind of analysis for each of them, but the variable names are different in the different surveys, you will need to include a segment for each survey to rename and/or recode the variables into consistent names and codes.
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Re: Struggling finding cervical cancer variables [message #29452 is a reply to message #27665] |
Thu, 20 June 2024 23:10 |
backclac
Messages: 25 Registered: August 2023
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Member |
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Janet-DHS wrote on Fri, 15 September 2023 17:38Following is a response from DHS staff member, Tom Pullum:
Variables with a prefix s in the IR and KR files, or a prefix sh in the PR files, are "special" or "survey-specific". Because they are not standard, they don't have the same variable names wherever they appear. Often such questions eventually do become standardized. For example, questions about early child development are now standard but for several years they appeared with variable names and even coding structures that varied considerable from one survey to another.
Questions about chronic diseases are going through a similar evolution. I predict that eventually they will have a standard wording, coding, and names, but until then, you have to do some searching to find them. In Stata you can open a file and then, for example, enter "lookfor cancer" and you will find the variables that have "cancer" in the variable label.
If you are looping through surveys and want to do the same kind of analysis for each of them, but the variable names are different in the different surveys, you will need to include a segment for each survey to rename and/or recode the variables into consistent names and codes.
I am using the Ghana Demographic and Health Survey 2022
Kindly help me with the variables for Breast Cancer and Cervical Cancer, since they are country-specific.
I would appreciate it if the formula or syntax is given.
Thank you
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