A. Screener
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For people who
volunteer at the introduction that they have health insurance,
train interviewers to collect the type of insurance held by
the sample member, and allow interviewers to enter data in
Section B (automatic screen out in Section A).
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B. Insurance Screener
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Removed all wording
appropriate for proxy interviews.
Incorporated probe into
the question (B1, B2).
Deleted description of
state Medicaid cards (B1).
Moved information about
plans that are excluded to the beginning of the question (B9).
Added sample member’s
name to first sentence of consent script (B19).
Updated toll-free
telephone number (B21).
Revise consent (B20 and
B24). We previously said, “Participating in this study
will not in any way affect the amount of cash benefits you
receive even if you return to work.” Revised to “Being
in the study will not change any of the rules that determine
whether you receive Disability Insurance cash benefits”.
Revised B21 to
incorporate language required by SSA.
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Cards change too
frequently, and there are too many variations within a state
for this to be useful.
Make exclusions more
salient and improve flow of question.
Improves clarity about
SSA’s role on the project, uses of data, and the
duration in which SSA will obtain administrative data for
sample members.
Intended
to reduce the likelihood that sample members would offer to
drop their insurance coverage in order to get into the
demonstration, and reduces the likelihood that interviewers
will need to explain that in order to be eligible, sample
members must be uninsured at the time we first speak to them.
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C. Health and
Functional Status
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Made minor wording
changes.
Added valid values.
Removed all wording
appropriate for proxy interviews.
Removed questions that
ask respondents to self-report the main and secondary
impairments that qualify them for SSDI (C4-C6).
Previously asked about
devices used for reading, hearing, and speaking in one
question. Separated the question to ask separately about
devices used for reading (C8, C8a).
Revised to ask about
limitations using public transportation and riding as a
passenger in a car separately (C10f, C10g).
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We are not allowing
proxy respondents for the baseline interview.
Based on information
from the NBS, we do not expect self-reported condition to
match the impairment of record with SSA. Only the impairment
of record will be used in our analyses.
The question was double
barreled. Some respondents who use devices for reading may
not need a device for hearing or speaking. Respondents were
confused about how to answer.
The question was double
barreled. Some respondents who had trouble with one
transportation mode had no problem with the other and were
confused about how to answer.
OMB requested that
these questions be added to the baseline because they will be
included on the follow-up survey to inform the cost-utility
analysis.
There
is some overlap between the PHQ-9 and SF-6D questions required
by OMB. Respondents gave inconsistent answers across the two
measures, complicating the analysis. Because OMB mandated the
SF-6D, we retained these questions and dropped the PHQ-9,
which is being administered periodically by CareGuide.
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D. Use of Medical
Services
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Added skip logic.
Added probes to improve
question clarity.
Added valid values and
edit checks.
Added reference date
(D3).
Revised range response
options (D3a).
Removed response
options (D3e, D6, D6c) and added instruction for interviewer
to enter verbatim response. Interviewers will code verbatim
responses into code frame (original range response options) at
the end of the interview after ending the call with the
respondent.
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Improves sample
member’s recall.
Based on feedback from
researchers.
The list of response
options was too long to code during the interview.
Pretest respondents had
difficulty answering a question that asked about visits (i.e.,
referrals) and tests in a single question.
During pretesting,
sample members were confused by the question wording about
postponing or not getting recommended medical procedures.
Respondents did not know how to answer if they hadn’t
had the procedure yet because they were waiting to get an
appointment. We revised the question to first ask if the
respondent got the recommended procedures (we dropped the
reference to postponement).
Makes
time frame consistent with other questions.
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E. Employment History
and Supports
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Made minor wording
changes.
Added valid values.
Added explanation of
jobs to the question (E2).
Revised time reference
from months to year (E4a, E9a).
Added alternate wording
to accommodate multiple jobs (E4).
Changed reference to
last time worked for pay (E7, E7b, E8).
Added question about
usual number of hours worked per week (E10 or Ell).
Deleted questions E11,
E11a, E13 and E13a, which asked about employment over the past
three years, in favor of the last time worked questions.
The question was
changed to determine the easiest way for respondents to
provide earnings information (E14).
The response options
for earnings were changed so that wages are reported annually,
rather than hourly (E16).
Switched the order of
questions to ask knowledge questions first, then to ask about
the information booklet.
Incorporated the probe
into the question (E21).
Deleted questions (E25
and E26).
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Pretest respondents
found using “before you applied for SSDI” a
confusing reference period, so these questions were reworded
to ask respondents about the last time they worked for pay.
Omission revealed
during pretesting.
This
accommodates respondents by allowing them to answer using the
basis that is easiest for them.
The interviewers
reported that this method is generally easier for
respondents. By increasing the number of ranges it
allows respondents to give a more precise response.
Respondents found the
questions about one and two years redundant. Respondents will
be asked only if they see themselves working in the next two
years, which corresponds to the duration of the demonstration.
Information available
from administrative records.
Interviewers
reported that some respondents had trouble with the questions
regarding rules for receiving SSDI. Many did not know the
answers and were reluctant to guess.
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F. Household
Composition and Income
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Added skip logic.
Added valid values and
edit checks.
Added answer category
for sample members who reside in group homes.
Added reference period
(F6).
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Narrows the reference
period for the respondent.
By increasing the
ranges it allows respondents to give a more precise response.
Improves
coding accuracy.
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G. Background
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Initially we were going
to rely on SSA records for these data. However, these data
are sometimes missing from administrative records. To gather
complete information, we added race and ethnicity questions to
the baseline survey.
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H. Contact Information
and Study Group Assignment
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Added questions to
collect cell phone numbers for respondent and contact persons
(H2a, H2b).
Revised assignment
scripts to give sample members some information about the
health benefit, services, and co-pays that apply to the AB
Health Plan and AB Health Plan Plus groups (H17, H18).
Added a question to
determine if sample members understood their assignment
status.
Added coding choices at
H20 from questions D3e, D4b, D5b, D6b and related follow-up
questions to the end after the interviewer has terminated the
call.
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We believed that the
news of being assigned to the control group would be too
disappointing and that some control group members would ask to
withdraw from the study at this point. Mailing the assignment
letter along with the incentive check is meant to limit
attrition.
These questions would
take too much time to code during the interview. Interviewers
will review their verbatim responses for these items and enter
codes at the end after terminating the call.
Feedback
from pretest.
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