A CUP OF HEALTH WITH CDC
Telephone Surveys and Your Health
Surveillance of Certain Health Behaviors Among
States and Selected Local Areas
— United States, 2005
June 15, 2007
[Announcer] This podcast is presented by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
CDC – safer, healthier people.
[Matthew Reynolds] Welcome to A Cup of Health with CDC, a weekly broadcast
of the
MMWR, the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. I’m your host, Matthew
Reynolds.
Essential to CDC’s work is identifying trends in health. One way CDC
collects health
information is by conducting random telephone surveys of the American public.
Dr. Lina
Balluz from CDC’s National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and
Health
Promotion is with us today to discuss one of those important surveys, the Behavioral
Risk Factor Surveillance System or the BRFSS. Dr. Balluz and her colleagues
have just
published an article that discusses how these surveys are done and why they
are so
important. Welcome to the show, Dr. Balluz.
[Dr. Balluz] Thank you, Matthew. It’s a pleasure to be here.
[Matthew Reynolds] Br. Balluz, CDC plays an important role in helping local
and state
health departments learn about the choices people make that affect their health.
It isn’t
just guess work when public health professionals learn about changes and trends
in
lifestyle choices and other health-related behaviors that can affect health.
How does the
Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System or the BRFSS collect all of this
health
information?
[Dr. Balluz] BRFSS is the largest, continuously conducted telephone survey.
It’s
conducted in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, and
the Virgin
Islands. Interviews are conducted with adults, 18 years and older, and the
questions
focus on risk behaviors, chronic conditions, disabilities, injuries, and some
communicable diseases.
[Matthew Reynolds] It seems that doing telephone interviews would be time
consuming and might require specialized training. So who’s actually on
the other end of
the line, talking with the public?
[Dr. Balluz] Interviewers are all trained to ask questions in a uniform way,
so that data
can be compared among states; and all states use the CATI system, which is
a
computer assisted telephone interviewing software. The interviews usually take
between 20 and 30 minutes, and phone calls are made all week long, including
weekends (daytime and evenings).
Each state completes hundreds of interviews each month, which resulted in
approximately 350,000 interviews per year, nationwide.
[Matthew Reynolds] What are some examples of the kind of trends that you and
your
colleagues learned from the survey?
[Dr. Balluz] The survey provided information on the prevalence of access to
care;
obesity; immunization and other preventive services; and changes in risk behaviors,
such as diet, physical activity, smoking, drinking.
[Matthew Reynolds] It sounds like the BRFSS brings in massive amounts of
information. Once you have all that data, how is it used?
[Dr. Balluz] The information is used to identify groups of people at high risk
for certain
diseases or death or injuries. It’s also used to spot trends in risk
behavior and develop
strategies and programs to target these trends. The information can be used
in health
planning and in developing targeted prevention programs. Also, it can be used
to
support any changes in health policies, such as smoking in restaurants or workplaces.
[Matthew Reynolds] Well, clearly the BRFSS is an important resource for CDC
and for
state and local health departments. It’s also easy to see how important
it is to health
promotion and disease prevention. Considering that your information shapes
important
policies, do you have recommendations for our listeners?
[Dr. Balluz] Yes, and not only yes to the fact that BRFSS is a very important
source of
information, but “Yes” we hope is the answer the listener will
give when she or he is
asked to participate in BRFSS. If you want to get more information about the
health
survey, and to get some examples of how the health information is used, you
can go to
www.cdc.gov/brfss for more information.
[Matthew Reynolds] Thank you for taking the time to talk with us today, Dr.
Balluz.
[Dr. Balluz] It’s my pleasure. Thank you.
[Matthew Reynolds] That’s it for this week’s show. Don’t
forget to join us next week.
Until then, be well. This is Matthew Reynolds for A Cup of Health with CDC.
[Announcer] To access the most accurate and relevant health information that
affects you,
your family and your community, please visit www.cdc.gov.