Data Collection
Household Survey
Detailed demographic, economic, time use, labor force participation,
asset ownership, and expenditure data were obtained. Income can be
approximated from the survey in 3 ways:
through responses to direct questions about income, through the
summation of net receipts from all reported activities, and through
responses to questions about expenditures. Full income from market and
non-market activities can be imputed. This detailed estimation of
income represents a significant advance in the measurement of income in
China. Inclusion of non-monetary
government subsidies, such as state-subsidized housing, is an
especially important advance. In the health section, details about
insurance coverage, availability of medical facilities, curative care
and illness information with associated time and money costs,
preventive care with a focus on immunizations, and use of family
planning and other preventive services were obtained.
Health and Nutrition Survey
All household members in 1991 and subsequent surveys provided
individual data on dietary intake, body composition, blood pressure,
health history, and health-related behaviors (e.g.,
smoking, beverage consumption, medication, key chronic diseases). These
data include dietary intake for 3 consecutive days as well as detailed
physical examinations that include blood pressure (for adults),
clinical measures of health, weight, height, and arm and head
circumference (and also waist-hip ratios beginning in 1993).
The 3 consecutive days during which detailed household food
consumption data were collected were randomly allocated from Monday to
Sunday and are almost equally balanced across the 7
days of the week for each sampling unit. Household food consumption was
determined by examining changes in inventory from the beginning to the
end of each day, in combination with a
weighing and measurement technique. Chinese balances with a maximum
limit of 15 kilograms and a minimum of 20 grams were used. All
processed foods (including edible oils and salt)
remaining after the last meal before initiation of the survey were
weighed and recorded. All purchases, home production, and processed
snack foods were recorded. Whenever foods were
brought into the household unit, they were weighed and preparation
waste (e.g., spoiled rice, discarded cooked meals fed to pets or
animals) was estimated when weighing was not possible. At the end of
the survey, all remaining foods were again weighed and recorded. The
number of household members and visitors were recorded at each meal.
Individual dietary intake for the same 3 consecutive days was
surveyed for all children aged 1 to 6 and all adults aged 20 to 45 in
1989, and for all individuals in later years. This was achieved by
asking individuals each day to report all food consumed away from home
on a 24-hour recall basis, and the same daily interview was used to
collect at-home individual consumption. In a few cases, subjects missed
one day due to absence, but over 99 percent of the sample was available
for the full 3 days of data.
The collection of both household and individual dietary intake
allowed us to check the quality of data collection by comparing the
two. Thus, each individual's average daily dietary intake,
calculated from the household survey, was compared with his or her
dietary intake based on 24-hour recall data. Where significant
discrepancies were found, the household and the
individual in question were revisited and asked about their food
consumption in order to resolve these discrepancies.
All field workers were trained nutritionists who are otherwise
professionally engaged in nutrition work in their own counties and who
have participated in other national surveys. Almost all
interviewers were graduates of post-secondary schools; many had
four-year degrees. In addition, 3 days of specific training in the
collection of dietary data were provided for this survey.
The 1991 Food Composition Table (FCT) for China was utilized to
calculate nutrient values for the dietary data of 2000 and previous
years. This FCT represents a significant advance over the earlier China
FCT both for higher quality chemical analyses and for improved
techniques of developing average nutrient values for foods whose
nutrient value varies over the country in a geographic context. The
UNC-CH group has worked with the National Institute of Nutrition and
Food Safety to update and improve this FCT. A new version of FCT (2002)
was used for 2004 survey and the latest version (2004) was used for
2006 survey.
Physical Activity
Child
We use two methods to collect physical activity and inactivity data
from our respondent children beginning in 1997. The first is based on
questionnaires which collect reports of usual time spent in activities
common in each of four settings. Activity questionnaires were designed
by Popkin and Barbara Ainsworth. Ainsworth was also involved in the
design and evaluation of the
activity questions for the U.S. Health Interview Surveys (HIS), the
MONICA Optional Study of Physical Activity (MOSPA), and more recently
the new International Physical Activity questionnaire for WHO. We
expanded upon the U.S. HIS questions to include activity and
inactivity, including TV viewing and other sedentary activities such as
using computers, playing board games, and reading. Activities in and
out of school, as well as culture-specific activity at home were
included.
The second method involves measurement of motion in a 24-hour period
using the Caltrac actometer. A subset of Chinese children provided
these data. The Caltrac is a low-cost device that looks like a beeper
and is attached to the waist. It registers motion in two dimensions,
and gives an estimate of total energy expenditure. The Caltrac was
selected because it provides
reasonably reliable and valid estimates of total activity, is cost
effective, is feasible for use in a variety of field settings, is
non-invasive and is well-accepted by children. Questions on sleeping
time and the nature of that day for the child are also asked in
conjunction with the Caltrac data. However, this was discontinued in
2004.
Adult
A small set of questions about the nature of occupation work was
included in 1997 and later surveys to capture some energy
expenditure-related dimensions of each adult's work. Included
were questions about the physical activity involved in the work. This
complements one set of energy expenditure questions that have been
asked as part of the nutrition data collection for all
adults since 1989.
The Elderly Component
Since 1997 survey, we collect a full series of questions on
activities of daily living and instrumental activities of daily living
along with a shorter set of cognition questions. Drs. Robert Wallace
and Namvar Zohoori developed these in Beijing in collaboration with the
Chinese group. Wallace, who is responsible for the health component of
the National Health and
Retirement Survey in the US, and Zohoori began with a comparable set of
questions and adjusted them to fit the Chinese reality. Additional
questions have been added on time use for the care of
older persons living inside and outside the home, and
inter-generational transfers from children to their parents and vice versa.
The CHNS obtain data quite similar to that collected by the National
Health and Retirement Survey now for many dimensions of elderly
behavior.
For CHNS93 and all subsequent surveys, we have developed and added
questionnaire components on activities of daily living (ADL) and
intergenerational transfers from adult children to their older parents
and vice versa. With the exception of some adaptation to the Chinese
situation, the ADL survey is designed to be comparable with the Health
and Retirement Survey and other U.S.-based National Center of Health
Statistics surveys. This section was considerably refined based on the
state of art at the time of the survey and on the pretests undertaken
in China. We collected not only the standard ADL data, but also
implemented an
independent approach termed the PULSES approach.
The PULSES score is less sensitive for the elderly than for other
groups, so it can be used only in an elementary way for checking the
predictive ability of the ADL measures. The PULSES score
taps a wider dimension than physical functioning, but provides much
less detail on each item. Other approaches were used to check the
predictive validity of the ADL data. Internal
consistency and observer consistency (inter- and intra-observer)
studies were undertaken.
In addition, CHNS93 enlarged the depth and range of measures of help
received by household members as well as parallel measures of help
given by household members. We asked about caregiving and help in
getting access to scarce or valuable resources. To obtain information
about help we added new questions about access to scarce commodities,
such as foreign cigarettes or appliances, help in getting special foods
needed to treat a variety of illnesses, and help in figuring out how to
find the best doctor if someone is ill. For each household member,
information about the source of assistance included age, gender,
relation to respondent (including living in the household or not, and
if not, whether previously resided in the household; and whether the
helper was a relative, school classmate, work friend, or neighbor),
occupation, and political status (party member, cadre). Similar
information was collected about those receiving
help from household members. Since a good deal of information about
caregiving was already collected, our task was to fill in all the
missing pieces so that complete and consistent
information was gathered for all household members.
The CHNS data are part of a broader initiative to create modules
sensitive to questions of aging. Many of the measures mentioned above
are part of what is termed inter-generational transfers. The typical
and most important categories are the transfer of money between elderly
family members (who may or may not be members of the sample household)
and the exchange of food,
clothing, and child care/elder care.
Body Image and Mass Media Behaviors and Practices
In 2000 and later surveys, body images were created to match Chinese body types. All
children aged 6-18 were asked about their desired body type and actual
body type using card shuffle techniques. These were developed by Jane
Brown and Peggy Bentley with the help of Penny Gordon-Larsen, all UNC
faculty working in this area.
In addition, each child was asked a selected set of questions related to the mass media.
The mother was asked a series of related questions about mass media
and television related to the children. These were included in the
Ever-Married Women questionnaire for women with a child aged 6-18.
Ever-Married Women Survey
Information from all ever-married women aged under 52 was collected
beginning in 1991. The questions in this section were revised and
expanded in 1993. These data include complex marriage and fertility
histories and additional information was also collected on family
planning, pregnancies, and infant feeding during inter-survey
intervals.
Community Survey
The community questionnaire (filled out for each of the primary
sampling units) collected information from a knowledgeable respondent
on community infrastructure (water, transport,
electricity, communications, and so on), services (family planning,
health facilities, retail outlets), population, prevailing wages, and
related variables.
Food Market Survey
In the first two CHNS surveys, state and free market data were
collected. But by 1997, none of our communities had separate state
prices so only free market stores and large stores were visited. In all
cases prices were collected for a representative basket of commodities.
Health and Family Planning Facility Surveys
In 1989, 1991 and 1993, separate visits were made to obtain in-depth
data in each community for every identified health service and family
planning provider or facility. Information was collected concerning
personnel, sources of funds, services available, prices (asked
separately for insured and self-pay patients), and distance to the
primary sampling units served by the facility. A separate questionnaire
was administered to the local family planning official about family
planning policies in the community. These were discontinued in 1997,
but selected questions were asked of these same personnel as part of
the community questionnaire.