BMC Research Notes | |
A population based validation study of self-reported pensions and benefits: the Nord-Trøndelag health study (HUNT) | |
Arnstein Mykletun3  Steinar Krokstad4  Ingvard Wilhelmsen1  Anja M S Ariansen5  Solbjørg Makalani Myrtveit2  | |
[1] Department of Medicine, Haraldsplass Deaconal Hospital, Bergen, Norway;Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Division of Mental Health, Department of Public Mental Health, Bergen, Norway;University of New South Wales, School of Psychiatry, Sydney, Australia;HUNT Research Centre, Department of Public Health and General Practice, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway;Faculty of social sciences, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway | |
关键词: Non-responders; Epidemiology; Bias; Validity; | |
Others : 1144928 DOI : 10.1186/1756-0500-6-27 |
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received in 2012-06-08, accepted in 2013-01-17, 发布年份 2013 | |
【 摘 要 】
Background
Measures of disability pensions, sickness certification and long-term health related benefits are often self-reported in epidemiological studies. Few studies have examined these measures, and the validity is yet to be established.
We aimed to estimate the validity of self-reported disability pension, rehabilitation benefit and retirement pension and to explore the benefit status and basic characteristics of those not responding to these items.
A large health survey (HUNT2) containing self-reported questionnaire data on sickness benefits and pensions was linked to a national registry of pensions and benefits, used as “gold standard” for the analysis. We investigated two main sources of bias in self-reported data; misclassification - due to participants answering questions incorrectly, and systematic missing/selection bias - when participants do not respond to the questions.
Sensitivity, specificity, positive (PPV) and negative (NPV) predicative value, agreement and Cohen’s Kappa were calculated for each benefit. Co-variables were compared between non-responders and responders.
Results
In the study-population of 40,633, 9.2% reported receiving disability pension, 1.4% rehabilitation benefits and 6.1% retirement pension. According to the registry, the corresponding numbers were 9.0%, 1.7% and 5.4%. Excluding non-responders, specificity, NPV and agreement were above 98% for all benefits. Sensitivity and PPV were lower. When including non-responders as non-receivers, specificity got higher, sensitivity dropped while the other measures changed less.
Between 17.7% and 24.1% did not answer the questions on benefits. Non-responders were older and more likely to be female. They reported more anxiety, more depression, a higher number of somatic diagnoses, less physical activity and lower consumption of alcohol (p < 0.001 for all variables). For disability pension and retirement pension, non-responders were less likely to receive benefits than responders (p < 0.001). For each benefit 2.1% or less of non-responders were receivers. False positive responses were more prevalent than false negative responses.
Conclusions
The validity of self-reported data on disability pension, rehabilitation benefits and retirement pension is high – it seems that participants’ responses can be trusted. Compared to responders, non-responders are less likely to be receivers. If necessary, power and validity can be kept high by imputing non-responders as non-receivers.
【 授权许可】
2013 Myrtveit et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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20150331050545137.pdf | 247KB | download | |
Figure 1. | 134KB | Image | download |
【 图 表 】
Figure 1.
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