| Wellcome Open Research | |
| Methodology of Natsal-COVID Wave 1: a large, quasi-representative survey with qualitative follow-up measuring the impact of COVID-19 on sexual and reproductive health in Britain [version 2; peer review: 2 approved] | |
| Clare Tanton1  Chris Bonell1  Catherine H Mercer2  Soazig Clifton2  Pam Sonnenberg2  Emily Dema2  Anne Conolly2  Andrew J Copas2  Nigel Field2  Margaret Blake3  Julie Riddell4  Raquel Boso Perez4  Kirstin R Mitchell4  | |
| [1] Faculty of Public Health & Policy, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London, WC1E 7HT, UK;Institute for Global Health, University College London, Mortimer Market Centre, London, WC1E 6JB, UK;Ipsos MORI, 3 Thomas More Square, London, E1W 1YW, UK;MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, 99 Berkeley Street, Glasgow, G3 7HR, UK; | |
| 关键词: COVID-19; population estimates; online survey; sexual behaviour; sexual health; relationships; eng; | |
| DOI : | |
| 来源: DOAJ | |
【 摘 要 】
Background: Britain’s National Surveys of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal) have been undertaken decennially since 1990 and provide a key data source underpinning sexual and reproductive health (SRH) policy. The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted many aspects of sexual lifestyles, triggering an urgent need for population-level data on sexual behaviour, relationships, and service use at a time when gold-standard in-person, household-based surveys with probability sampling were not feasible. We designed the Natsal-COVID study to understand the impact of COVID-19 on the nation’s SRH and assessed the sample representativeness. Methods: Natsal-COVID Wave 1 data collection was conducted four months (29/7-10/8/2020) after the announcement of Britain’s first national lockdown (23/03/2020). This was an online web-panel survey administered by survey research company, Ipsos MORI. Eligible participants were resident in Britain, aged 18-59 years, and the sample included a boost of those aged 18-29. Questions covered participants’ sexual behaviour, relationships, and SRH service use. Quotas and weighting were used to achieve a quasi-representative sample of the British general population. Participants meeting criteria of interest and agreeing to recontact were selected for qualitative follow-up interviews. Comparisons were made with contemporaneous national probability surveys and Natsal-3 (2010-12) to understand bias. Results: 6,654 participants completed the survey and 45 completed follow-up interviews. The weighted Natsal-COVID sample was similar to the general population in terms of gender, age, ethnicity, rurality, and, among sexually-active participants, numbers of sexual partners in the past year. However, the sample was more educated, contained more sexually-inexperienced people, and included more people in poorer health. Conclusions: Natsal-COVID Wave 1 rapidly collected quasi-representative population data to enable evaluation of the early population-level impact of COVID-19 and lockdown measures on SRH in Britain. Although sampling was less representative than the decennial Natsals, Natsal-COVID will complement national surveillance data and Natsal-4 (planned for 2022).
【 授权许可】
Unknown