WBT Flipbooks

Digital Health Practices, Social Media Use, and Mental Well-Being Among Teens and Young Adults in the U.S.

Issue link: https://blog.providence.org/i/1009460

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 23 of 94

Hopelab & Well Being Trust 24 Response Rate and Margin of Error The American Association of Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) defines several component rates used to calculate final response rates. Using those definitions, the final stage completion rate for this survey is 37.3 percent, the weighted household panel AAPOR III response rate is 33.7 percent, and the weighted household panel retention rate is 88.1 percent, for a cumulative response rate of 5.9 percent. Single- digit response rates are more typical now than in the past, due to the methodological challenges associated with, for example, the decline of landline telephones, a traditional way to contact U.S. households. Longitudinal assessments of declining response rates have shown that the data collected are reliable since the people answering the questions still reflect the total population. In other words, Americans across every demographic group are not responding to survey invita- tions. 9 However, there is also the possibility that people experiencing emotional problems, such as depressive symptoms, are less likely to respond to a survey. The overall margin of sampling error for this survey is +/- 5.0 percentage points at the 95 percent confidence level, including the design effect. The margin of sampling error may be higher for subgroups. Weighting Once the sample was selected and fielded, and all the study data were collected and made final, a post-stratification process was used to adjust for any survey nonresponse as well as any non-coverage or under- and over-sampling resulting from the study-specific sample design. Post-stratification variables included age, gender, census division, race/ethnicity, and education. Weighting variables were obtained from the 2017 Current Population Survey. The weighted data reflect the U.S. population of young people age 14 to 22. 9 Deane, C. et al. "Flashpoints in Polling" (Pew Research Center, 2016). See: http:// www.pewresearch.org/2016/08/01/ flashpoints-in-polling/ Methodology

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

view archives of WBT Flipbooks - Digital Health Practices, Social Media Use, and Mental Well-Being Among Teens and Young Adults in the U.S.