Bibliographic Description |
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Study No.: |
3927 |
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Title: |
National Survey of America's Families (NSAF), 1999 |
Alternate Title: |
NSAF, Round Two |
Principal Investigator(s): |
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Funding: |
Annie E. Casey Foundation W. K. Kellogg Foundation Robert Wood Johnson Foundation David and Lucile Packard Foundation John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Charles Stewart Mott Foundation McKnight Foundation Commonwealth Fund Stuart Foundation Weingart Foundation Fund for New Jersey Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation Joyce Foundation Rockefeller Foundation |
Bibliographic Citation: |
Urban Institute, and Child Trends. National Survey of America's Families (NSAF), 1999. ICPSR03927-v1. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2007-10-03. doi:10.3886/ICPSR03927.v1 |
Series: |
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Scope of Study |
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Summary: |
The National Survey of America's Families (NSAF) is a household survey that provides a comprehensive look at quantitative measures of the well-being of children, adults, and their families. While the focus of the survey is at the state level, the scope is national -- with a primary emphasis on low-income families. NSAF information was gathered from interviews conducted with the Most Knowledgeable Adult (MKA), the person in the household who was most knowledgeable about the questions being asked about the respondent, their spouse/partner (if applicable) and the focal child (or children). Data were collected from more than 40,000 families in two stages. First, a screener interview was administered to determine whether a household was eligible to complete the second, extended interview. Two types of extended interviews were administered. Option A interviews were used in households with children under age 18. Option B interviews were used in childless adult households and also with emancipated minors. The extended interview was divided into several sections and is labeled A through P below:
The 1999 NSAF data are available in nine parts and are organized into hierarchical, flat household-, family-, person-, adult-, and child-level files. A description of each is provided below:
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Subject Terms: |
child care, child development, child support, child welfare, cognition, families, federal aid, food programs, health attitudes, health care, health care access, health insurance, health services utilization, household composition, household income, job training, living arrangements, low income groups, mental health, public assistance programs, student attitudes, welfare services |
Geographic Coverage: |
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Time Period: |
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Date of Collection: |
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Unit of Observation: |
focal child, adult, family |
Universe: |
Civilian, noninstitutionalized persons under age 65 living in the United States. |
Data Types: |
survey data |
Data Collection Notes: |
All components of the NSAF questionnaire were also translated into Spanish. A hard copy of the Spanish language interview is not available. Those interested in the translations for individual questions should contact the Urban Institute. Most NSAF items were not asked of all persons in families or households. Thus, for many measures of adult or child well-being, it is not possible to construct aggregate measures of well-being based on individual information for families or households that will be valid for all families or households. Similarly, most of the items on child well-being are only determined for focal children and not all children in the household or family. Data collection for the NSAF was carried out by Westat. Additional information about this data collection may be found in a series of methodology reports available directly through the Web site of the Urban Institute. |
Methodology |
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Sample: |
The NSAF drew households from two separate sampling frames: (1) a list-assisted, random-digit dialing (RDD) sample of telephone numbers supplemented by (2) an area probability sample of nontelephone households. Both the random-digit dialing and the area probability samples for the 1999 NSAF were drawn, in part, from the 1997 NSAF sampling frame with an additional sample of newly selected telephone numbers. Overall, 147,623 households were screened, with detailed extended telephone interviews being conducted in 40,874 households. The nontelephone sample yielded 1,676 extended interviews in 1,486 households for a total of 42,360 interviewed households. |
Weight: |
The NSAF employs a complex sample design, thus appropriate weights are essential to produce state and national estimates that are representative of the population. Five categories of weights are currently available with the NSAF data, each appropriate for a different set of respondents or group of questions from the survey. The five weight categories are: focal child, adult pair, random adult, childless adult, and family. Within each category, there are separate weights for producing state and national-level estimates. Detailed information about the weights may be found at the Urban Institute Web site. |
Mode of Data Collection: |
telephone interview, face-to-face interview |
Response Rates: |
Screener interviews: 76.7 percent. Overall child interviews: 62.4 percent. Overall adult interviews: 59.4 percent. |
Extent of Processing: |
All archived data undergo a confidentiality review and are altered when necessary to limit the risk of disclosure. The archive also routinely creates ready-to-go data files along with setups in the major statistical software formats as well as standard codebooks to accompany the data. In addition to these procedures, the archive performed the following processing steps for this data collection:
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Access and Availability |
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Note: |
Detailed file-level information (such as record length, case count, and variable count) is listed in the file manifest. |
Original ICPSR Release: |
2007-10-03 |
Restrictions: |
This data collection may not be used for any purpose other than statistical reporting and analysis. Use of these data to learn the identity of any person or establishment is prohibited. |
Dataset(s): |
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