TY - JOUR
T1 - Weighting strategies for combining data from dual-frame telephone surveys
T2 - Emerging evidence from Australia
AU - Baffour, Bernard
AU - Haynes, Michele
AU - Western, Mark
AU - Pennay, Darren
AU - Misson, Sebastian
AU - Martinez, Arturo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Statistics Sweden.
PY - 2016/9
Y1 - 2016/9
N2 - Until quite recently, telephone surveys have typically relied on landline telephone numbers. However, with the increasing popularity and affordability of mobile phones, there has been a surge in households that do not have landline connections. Additionally, there has been a decline in the response rates and population coverage of landline telephone surveys, creating a challenge to collecting representative social data. Dual-frame telephone surveys that use both landline and mobile phone sampling frames can overcome the incompleteness of landline-only telephone sampling. However, surveying mobile phone users introduces new complexities in sampling, nonresponse measurement and statistical weighting. This article examines these issues and illustrates the consequences of failing to include mobile-phoneonly users in telephone surveys using data from Australia. Results show that there are significant differences in estimates of populations’ characteristics when using information solely from the landline or mobile telephone sample. These biases in the population estimates are significantly reduced when data from the mobile and landline samples are combined and appropriate dual-frame survey estimators are used. The optimal choice of a dual-frame estimation strategy depends on the availability of good-quality information that can account for the differential patterns of nonresponse by frame.
AB - Until quite recently, telephone surveys have typically relied on landline telephone numbers. However, with the increasing popularity and affordability of mobile phones, there has been a surge in households that do not have landline connections. Additionally, there has been a decline in the response rates and population coverage of landline telephone surveys, creating a challenge to collecting representative social data. Dual-frame telephone surveys that use both landline and mobile phone sampling frames can overcome the incompleteness of landline-only telephone sampling. However, surveying mobile phone users introduces new complexities in sampling, nonresponse measurement and statistical weighting. This article examines these issues and illustrates the consequences of failing to include mobile-phoneonly users in telephone surveys using data from Australia. Results show that there are significant differences in estimates of populations’ characteristics when using information solely from the landline or mobile telephone sample. These biases in the population estimates are significantly reduced when data from the mobile and landline samples are combined and appropriate dual-frame survey estimators are used. The optimal choice of a dual-frame estimation strategy depends on the availability of good-quality information that can account for the differential patterns of nonresponse by frame.
KW - Dual-frame telephone surveys
KW - Mobile phone sampling
KW - Nonresponse
KW - Weighting
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84988947618&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1515/JOS-2016-0029
DO - 10.1515/JOS-2016-0029
M3 - Article
SN - 0282-423X
VL - 32
SP - 549
EP - 578
JO - Journal of Official Statistics
JF - Journal of Official Statistics
IS - 3
ER -