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National Health Interview
Survey (NHIS)
Celebrating the First 50 years:
1957 - 2007

NCHS Home | NHIS Home | Questionnaires, Datasets, and Related Documentation | 1997-2008 Data and Related Documentation | 1996-Prior Data and Related Documentation | NHIS on Disability | Coming EventsMethods | Reports | Data Linked to NHIS Data | Related Sites  | CDC/NCHS Privacy Policy Notice | Accessibility | Search NCHS | Contact us

 

Description

The National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) is the principal source of information on the health of the civilian noninstitutionalized population of the United States and is one of the major data collection programs of the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) which is part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The National Health Survey Act of 1956 provided for a continuing survey and special studies to secure accurate and current statistical information on the amount, distribution, and effects of illness and disability in the United States and the services rendered for or because of such conditions. The survey referred to in the Act, now called the National Health Interview Survey, was initiated in July 1957. Since 1960, the survey has been conducted by NCHS, which was formed when the National Health Survey and the National Vital Statistics Division were combined.

NHIS data are used widely throughout the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) to monitor trends in illness and disability and to track progress toward achieving national health objectives. The data are also used by the public health research community for epidemiologic and policy analysis of such timely issues as characterizing those with various health problems, determining barriers to accessing and using appropriate health care, and evaluating Federal health programs.

The NHIS also has a central role in the ongoing integration of household surveys in DHHS. The designs of two major DHHS national household surveys have been or are linked to the NHIS. The National Survey of Family Growth used the NHIS sampling frame in its first five cycles and the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey currently uses half of the NHIS sampling frame. Other linkage includes linking NHIS data to death certificates in the National Death Index (NDI).

While the NHIS has been conducted continuously since 1957, the content of the survey has been updated about every 10-15 years. In 1996, a substantially revised NHIS questionnaire began field testing. This revised questionnaire, described in detail below, was implemented in 1997 and has improved the ability of the NHIS to provide important health information.

Purpose and Scope
The main objective of the NHIS is to monitor the health of the United States population through the collection and analysis of data on a broad range of health topics. A major strength of this survey lies in the ability to display these health characteristics by many demographic and socioeconomic characteristics.

The NHIS covers the civilian noninstitutionalized population residing in the United States at the time of the interview. Because of technical and logistical problems, several segments of the population are not included in the sample or in the estimates from the survey. Examples of persons excluded are patients in long-term care facilities; persons on active duty with the Armed Forces (though their dependents are included); persons incarcerated in the prison system; and U.S. nationals living in foreign countries.

Sample Design
The National Health Interview Survey is a cross-sectional household interview survey. Sampling and interviewing are continuous throughout each year. The sampling plan follows a multistage area probability design that permits the representative sampling of households and noninstitutional group quarters (e.g., college dormitories). The sampling plan is redesigned after every decennial census. The current sampling plan was implemented in 2006. It has many similarities to the previous sampling plan, which was in place from 1995 to 2005. The first stage of the current sampling plan consists of a sample of 428 primary sampling units (PSU's) drawn from approximately 1,900 geographically defined PSU's that cover the 50 States and the District of Columbia. A PSU consists of a county, a small group of contiguous counties, or a metropolitan statistical area.

Within a PSU, two types of second-stage units are used: area segments and permit segments. Area segments are defined geographically and contain an expected eight, twelve, or sixteen addresses. Permit segments cover housing units built after the 2000 census. The permit segments are defined using updated lists of building permits issued in the PSU since 2000 and contain an expected four addresses.

The current NHIS sample design continues the oversampling of both Black persons and Hispanic persons that was a new feature of the previous sample design. A new feature of the current sample design is that Asian persons are oversampled as well.

One of the two procedures used for oversampling is "screening". Prior to interviewing, the sample addresses in area segments are randomly separated into two parts. In one part, the sample addresses are assigned to be "screened". In this part, the NHIS interview proceeds through the collection of the household roster. The interview then continues only if the household roster contains one or more black, Asian, or Hispanic persons. Otherwise, the interview terminates and the household is said to be "screened out". In the other part of the NHIS sample, full interviews occur at all households. No screening occurs in permit segments.

The other oversampling procedure is applied when area segments are sampled within PSU's. Segments are grouped by 2000 census concentrations of black, Asian, and Hispanic persons, and groups with higher concentrations are sampled at a higher rate.

As with the previous sample design, the NHIS sample is drawn from each State and the District of Columbia. Although the NHIS sample is too small to provide State level data with acceptable precision for each State, selected estimates for most states may be obtained by combining data years.

The total NHIS sample is subdivided into four separate panels, or subdesigns, such that each panel is a representative sample of the U.S. population. This design feature has a number of advantages, including flexibility for the total sample size. For example, the 2006 and 2007 NHIS samples both were reduced because of budget shortfalls; two panels were cut from the sample in the third calendar quarter of each year.

The households and noninstitutional group quarters selected for interview each week in the NHIS are a probability sample representative of the target population. With four sample panels and no sample cuts, the expected NHIS sample size (completed interviews) is approximately 35,000 households containing about 87,500 persons. Survey participation is voluntary and the confidentiality of responses is assured under Section 308(d) of the Public Health Service Act. The annual response rate of NHIS is close to 90 percent of the eligible households in the sample.

Content of the Questionnaire
The NHIS questionnaire that was used from 1982-1996 consisted of two parts: (1) a set of basic health and demographic items (known as the Core questionnaire), and (2) one or more sets of questions on current health topics. The Core questionnaire remained the same over that time period while the current health topics changed depending on data needs. The Core questionnaire, while collecting useful data on health conditions and utilization, did not collect any information on insurance, access to health care, or health behaviors. In addition, much of the interview time in the Core questionnaire was devoted to collecting detailed information on events such as doctor visits and hospitalizations rather than on information that would better characterize the individual. The 1997 revision of the NHIS questionnaire has attempted to address these and other shortcomings.

The revised NHIS questionnaire, implemented since 1997, has Core questions and Supplements. The Core questions remain largely unchanged from year to year and allow for trends analysis and for data from more than one year to be pooled to increase sample size for analytic purposes. The Core contains four major components: Household, Family, Sample Adult, and Sample Child.

The Household component collects limited demographic information on all of the individuals living in a particular house. The Family component verifies and collects additional demographic information on each member from each family in the house and collects data on topics including health status and limitations, injuries, healthcare access and utilization, health insurance, and income and assets. The Family Core component allows the NHIS to serve as a sampling frame for additional integrated surveys as needed.

From each family in the NHIS, one sample adult and one sample child (if any children are present) are randomly selected and information on each is collected with the Sample Adult Core and the Sample Child Core questionnaires. Because some health issues are different for children and adults, these two questionnaires differ in some items but both collect basic information on health status, health care services, and health behaviors.

In the previous sample design, all eligible adults in a family had the same chance of being selected as the sample adult. A new feature of the current sample design is that adults aged 65+ who are black, Hispanic, or Asian have an increased chance of being selected as the sample adult, relative to adults aged under 65 and adults aged 65+ who are not black, Hispanic, or Asian.

The Supplements are used to respond to new public health data needs as they arise. As with previous NHIS supplements, the questionnaires are sometimes fielded only once or are repeated as needed. These questionnaires may be used to provide additional detail on a subject already covered in the Core or on a different topic not covered in other parts of the NHIS. The first Supplement from the current questionnaire design was fielded in 1998 and focused on data needed to track the Healthy People 2000 and 2010 objectives. Other topics covered in Supplements are Cancer Screening, Complementary and Alternative Medicine, Children’s Mental Health, and Healthcare Utilization. Inclusion of future Supplements is dependent on Departmental data needs and priorities.

Data Collection Procedures
Data are collected through a personal household interview conducted by interviewers employed and trained by the U.S. Bureau of the Census according to procedures specified by the NCHS.

For the Family Core component, all adult members of the household 17 years of age and over who are at home at the time of the interview are invited to participate and to respond for themselves. Beginning in 1997 data were collected for active duty military personnel provided there is one civilian in the family, however, these persons are not weighted for analytic purposes. For children and for adults not at home during the interview, information can be provided by a responsible adult family member, 18 years of age and over, residing in the household. For the Sample Adult questionnaire, one civilian adult per family is randomly selected; generally this individual must self-report responses to questions in this section. Information for the Sample Child questionnaire is obtained from a knowledgeable adult in the household, usually a parent.

The Bureau of the Census, under a contractual agreement, is the data collection agent for the NHIS. Nationally, the NHIS uses about 400 interviewers, trained and directed by health survey supervisors in each of the 12 Bureau of the Census Regional Offices. The supervisors are career Civil Service employees and the interviewers are part-time employees, selected through an examination and testing process. Interviewers receive thorough training in basic interviewing procedures and in the concepts and procedures unique to the NHIS.

The revised NHIS questionnaire fielded since 1997 uses a computer assisted personal interviewing (CAPI) mode. The CAPI version of the NHIS questionnaire is administered using a laptop computer and interviewers enter responses directly into the computer during the interview. This computerized mode offers distinct advantages in terms of timeliness of the data and improved data quality.

For publications and information:
Information Dissemination Staff
National Center for Health Statistics
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
3311 Toledo Road, Room 5407
Hyattsville, Maryland 20782-2003
(800) 432-4636
Internet home page address:
www.cdc.gov/nchs/

For program assistance:
Division of Health Interview Statistics
National Center for Health Statistics
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
3311 Toledo Road, Room 2217
Hyattsville, Maryland 20782-2003
(301) 458-4901

National Health Interview Survey (NHIS)
Celebrating the First 50 years: 1957 - 2007
NCHS Home | NHIS Home | Questionnaires, Datasets, and Related Documentation | 1997-2008 Data and Related Documentation | 1996-Prior Data and Related Documentation | NHIS on Disability | Coming Events Methods | Reports
| Data Linked to NHIS Data | Related Sites | CDC/NCHS Privacy Policy Notice Accessibility  Search NCHS | Contact us


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This page last reviewed July 10, 2008

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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
National Center for Health Statistics
Hyattsville, MD
20782

1-800-232-4636