首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Using Booking Data to Model Drug User Arrest Rates: A Preliminary to Estimating the Prevalence of Chronic Drug Use
Authors:William Rhodes  Ryan Kling  Patrick Johnston
Affiliation:(1) Domestic Health Division, Abt Associates Inc., 55 Wheeler Street, Cambridge, MA 02138-1168, USA;(2) Domestic Health Division, Abt Associates Inc., Cambridge, MA, USA;(3) Clinical Research Program, Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA, USA
Abstract:Public policy is often concerned with the size and characteristics of special populations that are difficult to reach in household surveys. Chronic drug users, who often live outside conventional households, provide the illustration motivating this paper. An alternative to household surveys is to question chronic drug users where they congregate—jails, treatment programs, and shelters, for example. Using such opportunistic data for prevalence estimation raises difficult problems for statistical inference: Study subjects who arrive at the collection points cannot be deemed a random sample of the general population. However, if we could estimate the rates at which chronic drug users arrive at the collection points, then we could use those estimates to weight the sample to represent the population. This paper presents a modified Poisson mixture model used to estimate the stochastic process that accounts for how chronic drug users get arrested. It uses that model to estimate arrest rates for 38 counties using up to sixteen quarters of data from the Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring survey.
Contact Information William RhodesEmail:
Keywords:Chronic drug use  Hard-to-reach populations  Arrest rates  Endogenous stratification  Poisson mixture models  Model-based estimation
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号