Spatial Recruitment Bias in Respondent-Driven Sampling: Implications for HIV Prevalence Estimation in Urban Heterosexuals

被引:0
作者
Samuel M. Jenness
Alan Neaigus
Travis Wendel
Camila Gelpi-Acosta
Holly Hagan
机构
[1] University of Washington,Department of Epidemiology
[2] HIV Epidemiology Program,New York City Department of Health
[3] John Jay College of Criminal Justice,Department of Anthropology
[4] The New School,Department of Sociology
[5] New York University,College of Nursing
来源
AIDS and Behavior | 2014年 / 18卷
关键词
Respondent-driven sampling; Survey sampling; HIV/AIDS; Heterosexual;
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学科分类号
摘要
Respondent-driven sampling (RDS) is a study design used to investigate populations for which a probabilistic sampling frame cannot be efficiently generated. Biases in parameter estimates may result from systematic non-random recruitment within social networks by geography. We investigate the spatial distribution of RDS recruits relative to an inferred social network among heterosexual adults in New York City in 2010. Mean distances between recruitment dyads are compared to those of network dyads to quantify bias. Spatial regression models are then used to assess the impact of spatial structure on risk and prevalence outcomes. In our primary distance metric, network dyads were an average of 1.34 (95 % CI 0.82–1.86) miles farther dispersed than recruitment dyads, suggesting spatial bias. However, there was no evidence that demographic associations with HIV risk or prevalence were spatially confounded. Therefore, while the spatial structure of recruitment may be biased in heterogeneous urban settings, the impact of this bias on estimates of outcome measures appears minimal.
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页码:2366 / 2373
页数:7
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