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Journal Article

Citation

Kessler RC, Heeringa SG, Colpe LJ, Fullerton CS, Gebler N, Hwang I, Naifeh JA, Nock MK, Sampson NA, Schoenbaum M, Zaslavsky AM, Stein MB, Ursano RJ. Int. J. Methods Psychiatr. Res. 2013; 22(4): 288-302.

Affiliation

Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/mpr.1399

PMID

24318218

PMCID

PMC3992816

Abstract

The Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS) is a multi-component epidemiological and neurobiological study designed to generate actionable recommendations to reduce US Army suicides and increase knowledge about determinants of suicidality. Three Army STARRS component studies are large-scale surveys: one of new soldiers prior to beginning Basic Combat Training (BCT; n = 50,765 completed self-administered questionnaires); another of other soldiers exclusive of those in BCT (n = 35,372); and a third of three Brigade Combat Teams about to deploy to Afghanistan who are being followed multiple times after returning from deployment (n = 9421). Although the response rates in these surveys are quite good (72.0-90.8%), questions can be raised about sample biases in estimating prevalence of mental disorders and suicidality, the main outcomes of the surveys based on evidence that people in the general population with mental disorders are under-represented in community surveys. This paper presents the results of analyses designed to determine whether such bias exists in the Army STARRS surveys and, if so, to develop weights to correct for these biases. Data are also presented on sample inefficiencies introduced by weighting and sample clustering and on analyses of the trade-off between bias and efficiency in weight trimming.

Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


Language: en

Keywords

US Army; design effects; epidemiologic research design; mental disorders; sample bias; sample weights; suicide; survey design efficiency; survey sampling

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