Study retention as bias reduction in a hard-to-reach population

Collecting data from hard-to-reach populations is a key challenge for research on poverty and other forms of extreme disadvantage. With data from the Boston Reentry Study (BRS), we document the extreme marginality of released prisoners and the related difficulties of study retention and analysis. An...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 113; no. 20; pp. 5477 - 5485
Main Authors Western, Bruce, Braga, Anthony, Hureau, David, Sirois, Catherine
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 17.05.2016
SeriesInaugural Article
Subjects
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Summary:Collecting data from hard-to-reach populations is a key challenge for research on poverty and other forms of extreme disadvantage. With data from the Boston Reentry Study (BRS), we document the extreme marginality of released prisoners and the related difficulties of study retention and analysis. Analysis of the BRS data yields three findings. First, released prisoners show high levels of “contact insecurity,” correlated with social insecurity, in which residential addresses and contact information change frequently. Second, strategies for data collection are available to sustain very high rates of study participation. Third, survey nonresponse in highly marginal populations is strongly nonignorable, closely related to social and economic vulnerability. The BRS response rate of 94% over a 1-y follow-up period allows analysis of hypothetically high nonresponse rates. In this setting, nonresponse attenuates regression estimates in analyses of housing insecurity, drug use, and unemployment. These results suggest that in the analysis of very poor and disadvantaged populations, methods that maximize study participation reduce bias and yield data that can usefully supplement large-scale household or administrative data collections.
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Contributed by Bruce Western, March 29, 2016 (sent for review October 23, 2015; reviewed by David Harding and Becky Pettit)
Author contributions: B.W., A.B., and C.S. designed research; B.W., A.B., D.H., and C.S. performed research; B.W. and C.S. analyzed data; and B.W., D.H., and C.S. wrote the paper.
2Present address: School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115.
This contribution is part of the special series of Inaugural Articles by members of the National Academy of Sciences elected in 2015.
Reviewers: D.H., University of California, Berkeley; and B.P., University of Texas at Austin.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1604138113