Introduction
Response rates for the Behavioral Risk Factor
Surveillance System (BRFSS) have declined in recent years. The response rate in
1993 was approximately 72%; in 2006, the response rate was approximately 51%. To
assess the impact of this decline on the quality of BRFSS estimates, we compared
selected health and risk factor estimates from BRFSS with similar estimates from
the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) and the National Health and
Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES).
Methods
We reviewed questionnaires from the 3 surveys and
identified a set of comparable measures related to smoking prevalence, alcohol
consumption, medical conditions, vaccination, health status, insurance coverage,
cost barriers to medical care, testing for human immunodeficiency virus, and
body measurements (height and weight).
We compared weighted estimates for up to 15 outcome measures, including overall measures and measures for 12 population subgroups. We produced design-appropriate point estimates and carried out statistical tests of hypotheses on the equality of such estimates. We then calculated P values for comparisons of NHIS and NHANES estimates with their BRFSS counterparts.
Results
Although BRFSS and NHIS estimates were statistically
similar for 5 of the 15 measures examined, BRFSS and NHANES estimates were
statistically similar for only 1 of 6 measures. The observed differences for
some of these comparisons were small, however.
Conclusion
These surveys produced similar estimates for several
outcome measures, although we observed significant differences as well. Many of
the observed differences may have limited consequences for implementing related
public health programs; other differences may require more detailed examination.
In general, the range of BRFSS estimates examined here tends to parallel those
from NHIS and NHANES, both of which have higher rates of participation.