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2005
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METHODOLOGY
Frerichs RR: Simple analytic procedures for rapid microcomputer-assisted surveys
in developing countries. Public Health Reports 104 (1), 24-35, 1989.
Surveys are often deemed necessary in developing countries when routine
sources of data are not considered adequate to answer important policy-related
questions. Although field work often goes smoothly, many surveys become bogged
down in the analysis stage. With the availability of microcomputers and
contemporary software, investigators in developing countries can use rapid
survey methodology (RSM) to process, analyze, and report survey findings more
quickly than ever before.
Presented in this paper are three simple analytic procedures for
planning and doing two-stage, rapid cluster surveys. All were
successfully used in three rapid surveys in rural regions of Burma and Thailand.
By use of a spreadsheet and graphics software package, the three procedures (a)
derive the first-stage selection of 30 cluster sites with probability
proportionate to size, (b) calculate variance estimates and confidence limits
for the parameters of interest and graphically present the findings as 90, 95,
and 99 percent confidence intervals, and (c) estimate the necessary sample size
for planning two-stage, rapid cluster surveys. The
procedures can be used both in the field and in teaching workshops or courses on
survey methods. Examples are given from three rapid surveys conducted in Hlegu
Township, Burma, and Sisaket Province, Thailand. In both countries, local health
professionals were first taught the methods in a 1-week workshop before they
used the procedure for conducting the rapid computer-assisted surveys.
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