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OBJECTIVES: This study evaluates the feasibility of a nonquota, street-intercept survey method that utilized random selection of interview sites. METHODS: The street-intercept survey was compared with a random digit-dial telephone survey conducted in the same catchment area among African-American adults aged 18 or older. RESULTS: The street-intercept survey's response rate was 80.2%; residence rate, 85.3%; interview completion rate, 97.9%; interference rate, 4.0%; and yield rate, 2.5 interviews per interviewer per hour. The street-intercept method produced more representative distributions of age and sex than the random-digit-dial survey. CONCLUSIONS: The street-intercept method is a feasible alternative to traditional population survey methods and may provide better access to harder-to-reach segments of the urban population in a safe manner.
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Kevin W. Miller
Johns Hopkins University
Logan Wilder
University of Michigan
Frances Stillman
University of Chicago
American Journal of Public Health
Johns Hopkins University
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Miller et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dc4f9e3080d3567e274d97 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.87.4.655
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