Voas et al 2006

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Portal Surveys of Time-Out Drinking Locations: A Tool for Studying Binge Drinking and AOD Use
Robert B. Voas, Debra Furr-Holden, Elizabeth Lauer, Kristin Bright, Mark B. Johnson and Brenda Miller
Eval Rev 2006; 30; 44
DOI: 10.1177/0193841X05277285
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http://erx.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/30/1/44

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EVALUATION
10.1177/0193841X05277285
Voas
et al. / PORTAL
REVIEW
SURVEYS
/ FEBRUARY
OF TIME-OUT
2006
DRINKING

PORTAL SURVEYS OF
TIME-OUT DRINKING LOCATIONS
A Tool for Studying Binge Drinking and AOD Use
ROBERT B. VOAS
DEBRA FURR-HOLDEN
Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Calverton, MD

ELIZABETH LAUER
Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, San Diego, CA

KRISTIN BRIGHT
Prevention Research Center

MARK B. JOHNSON
Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Calverton, MD

BRENDA MILLER
Prevention Research Center

Portal surveys, defined as assessments occurring proximal to the entry point to a high-risk locale
and immediately on exit, can be used in different settings to measure characteristics and behavior of attendees at an event of interest. This methodology has been developed to assess alcohol
and other drug (AOD) use at specific events and has included measuring intentions to use collected at entry and reported use on exit, as well as chemical tests for AOD consumption at both
entrance and exit. Recent applications of the portal survey procedure to electronic music dance
events that occur in established venues (e.g., bars or nightclubs) are discussed.
Keywords: assessment methodology; young adults; rave; electronic music dance event
(EMDE)

Portal surveys are a form of intercept sampling specifically designed to
capture at-risk individuals at the entrance to and exit from locales of
increased alcohol and other drug (AOD) risk to characterize the attendees,
their AOD use intentions, and their reported consumption along with physiological measures of AOD use. To qualify as a portal survey opportunity
AUTHORS’ NOTE: This work was supported by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism under Grant Nos. R01 AA11913 and K05 AA014260.
EVALUATION REVIEW, Vol. 30 No. 1, February 2006 44-65
DOI: 10.1177/0193841X05277285
© 2006 Sage Publications

44

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Voas et al. / PORTAL SURVEYS OF TIME-OUT DRINKING

45

appropriate for measuring AOD use, the environment must present three
components: (a) at least theoretically, be a venue associated with an increased
risk of AOD consumption; (b) exist in a location that permits intercepting and
assessing respondents before entry into and on exit from the setting; and (c)
have respondents who enter and exit during a sufficient span of time to permit
brief interviews and testing. This survey methodology can be used to study an
array of problems and populations as the defining features of its utility are
focused on the settings of interest and the risky behavior associated with the
setting. Broader examples of portal survey applications include studies of
binge drinking among American youth who cross the Mexico border (Lange,
Lauer, and Voas 1999) and heavy drinking at college events (Sidewalk Survey). The foci of our previous and ongoing studies have involved young
adults and college students, but the application of portal survey procedure
can be useful in other populations and settings. For example, it is possible to
study levels of alcohol consumption at large sporting events or drug use
among concert attendees. Our goals in this current investigation are to better
understand maladaptive drinking-and-drug-use behavior associated with
electronic music dance events (EMDEs) and to identify possible avenues for
on-site interventions.
The portal survey approach has increasing utility because it is less expensive than the more traditional case-finding modalities (e.g., random-digit
dialing, mail surveys, clinical sampling, and school- or college-based surveys) and because data on binge drinking and AOD misuse are gathered
proximal to the substance use. Portal surveys provide a number of advantages
over more traditional survey systems. First, they allow temporal estimation
of binge drinking and AOD use during a particular high-risk event and/or
social setting. Second, procedures used in portal surveys allow estimation of
AOD use based on both self-report and biological assays. Thus, recall bias
and underreporting—potentially more problematic in situations involving
heavy AOD use—are minimized. Third, given the close proximity of a survey team to the setting, it is possible to observe and evaluate social and environmental influences during the portal survey. Fourth, the portal survey
methodology can use techniques that allow for anonymous data collection
from subjects entering and exiting the settings. Finally, the portal survey is a
particularly robust methodology for preevaluations and postevaluations used
for intervention studies.
Although traditional case-finding methodologies have their relative
advantages, there are several limitations relating to low response rates and
nonresponses: issues surrounding parental consent in research involving
minors; underrepresentation of ethnic minorities, males, and certain socioeconomic groups; and the lack of inclusion of school dropouts and

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46

EVALUATION REVIEW / FEBRUARY 2006

noncollege students. In studies of AOD use and misuse, these biases often
lead to underestimates of drug use and attenuation of risk-factor estimates
(Anthony and Petronis 1995). Investigations by Miller et al. (1997) and
Spooner and Flaherty (1993) found that not only is an intercept methodology
(specifically street intercept) a feasible method as assessed by response rates
and representativeness, it is also more cost efficient than are mail surveys and
random-digit-dial methods. Miller et al. found that this method achieves
more representative samples of underserved ethnic minorities (compared to
samples obtained using telephone methods) and yields a much higher
response rate (80.2% vs. 61.3% for the random-digit-dial survey). Spooner
and Flaherty concluded that there is a lower susceptibility to volunteer bias
using intercept methods and commented on the cost savings as compared to
more traditional methods (e.g., telephone surveys).
Much of what we know about the utility of intercept surveys was derived
from the intercept surveys conducted in market research. Public health studies employing social marketing theory have a history of success both in subject recruitment (e.g., Gries, Black, and Coster 1995; Black and Smith 1994)
and as a mode for delivering brief interventions (e.g., Gries, Black, and
Coster 1995; Green 1988; Lefebvre and Flora 1988). This current protocol
advances what we know about the effectiveness of intercept sampling and
demonstrates the feasibility of participant retention with this approach.
Most epidemiological and intervention information on AOD use is collected through self-report surveys. Such measures can be very useful in
exploring the characteristics of individual AOD users and, to a limited extent,
the characteristics of the environments conducive to AOD use. More direct
studies of attitudes and expectancies immediately surrounding the consumption of drugs are difficult because illicit drugs cannot be administered ethically to experimental subjects. Bar labs offer the opportunity to study adult
drinking behavior, but such studies present difficulties in achieving realism.
Ethnographic observations of bar behavior produce important qualitative
information but are less easily adapted for large-scale quantitative studies. It
is possible, however, to contact young adults who are social substance users
at events in which drugs and alcohol are likely to be readily available and consumed. This permits the study of youth who are dosing themselves under naturalistic circumstances by collecting self-report data and chemical-test data
before and after attendance at events in which AOD use occurs.
Portal studies are generally limited to venues where patrons enter and
leave at the same location, and they enter and leave over a sufficient time span
to permit a modest-sized survey team to interview a large number of attendees. Where the exits are in the same locations as the entrances, research stations (tables and equipment used in the survey) can be maintained in the same

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47

location throughout the event. Also, because the times of the entry and exit
surveys may overlap (individuals leave while some are still entering), staffing costs can be minimized. However, it is also necessary for participants to
arrive and depart during a time span that is sufficient to conduct interviews
and biological tests. For example, we have attempted to employ the portal
technique at athletic and theater events without success. Arenas and theaters
empty rapidly, generally through multiple exits, making it impossible to contact and reinterview participants. Bars, dances, and events are especially
suited for portal surveys because individuals enter and leave at varied times.

PORTAL SURVEYS AT THE BORDER
Portal surveys were conducted at the U.S.-Mexican border from 1997 to
2002 with support from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (Grant No. R01-11913; Lange, Lauer, and Voas 1999). A total of
5,041 weekend, nighttime border crossers were interviewed as they entered
and exited Mexico. Youth aged 18 to 25 years were recruited at the U.S. border between 10 p.m. and midnight on their way to a night of drinking in
Tijuana. This setting is especially conducive to examining the drinking of
young U.S. citizens because Mexico’s drinking age is 18 years, and alcohol is
very inexpensive across the border. An important feature of youthful crossborder drinking is that it is not simply an opportunity for these underage individuals to drink legally, but it is also an opportunity for youth of all ages to get
drunk, relax normal restraints, and “blow off steam” (Lange and Voas 1998,
2000). In fact, 50% of the youth heading into Mexico indicated that they
intended to get drunk, and postvisit breath tests determined that most
succeeded (Lange and Voas 1997).

TIME-OUT EVENTS
The importance of developing a methodology for assessing AOD use in
high-risk settings is related to the “time-out” theory of drinking, which
emphasizes the relaxation of social controls that accompanies heavy drinking in certain settings. Lange, Voas, and Johnson (2002) reported that many
of the young adults who crossed the border into Mexico not only were seeking bars where they could drink heavily but also were looking for locations
where they could relax the usual normative behavior and “let it all hang out,”
suggesting that they were looking for a time-out experience. Time-out,

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according to Listiak (1974, 13), is “a period of legitimate deviance from the
demands of accountability and conformity, social control is relaxed and
almost anything goes.” Cavan (1966, 67) suggested that “what goes on in a
bar is localized in time and place, and one need not anticipate being held
accountable for one’s conduct at some later time or in some later setting.”
This relaxation of responsibility for one’s behavior and a perception of a
relaxation of norms related to social behavior lead to what Listiak described
in connection with community festivals as “a high degree of drunken boisterous behavior, often erupting into fights and brawls” (p. 19). He went on to say
that many (time-out) events are marked by excessive drinking, illegal drinking, fighting, sexual looseness, and generally impulsive behavior. These and
other forms of deviance are legitimated at certain times or for certain
locations by an attitude of tolerance by police and other social control
agencies.
In most U.S. bars, opportunities for such uncontrolled behavior are limited by social norms and outlet serving practices or admission rules. Patrons
who exhibit drunken behavior that is disturbing to other guests are usually
encouraged to leave the premises. However, the level of such control varies
from bar to bar, depending on the level of supervision implemented by the
proprietor. At some drinking venues, such as beach keg parties or fraternity
parties, formal third-party supervision may be almost completely absent. In
other settings, such as athletic events, the size and activity of the crowd may
make supervision difficult.

EMDES
This article provides an example of the specific procedures and issues relevant to conducting portal surveys in one specific setting at which the authors
have conducted research: the EMDEs. EMDEs, which have emerged out of
the rave scene, are characterized by electronically produced music, light
shows, and intense physical dancing (Critcher 2000; Weir 2000; Randall
1992a, 1992b; Schwartz and Miller 1997). These events are particularly
important to the study of young adult AOD use because they are locations
where it is socially acceptable among attendees to mix drug use with music
and dance (e.g., Arria et al. 2002; Yacoubian et al. 2003). As the visibility of
the rave scene gradually diminished (Leinwand 2002), established clubs
began to feature music and dance parties within their venues, resulting in the
emergence of EMDEs. Such events vary in the extent to which alcohol or
drugs are a feature of the environment; however, most youth and young

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adults have some opportunity to obtain drugs in or near the event locations. In
addition, many EMDEs appear to provide special opportunities for AOD use
because they create the environment that produces time-out behavior. The
loud music, frenetic dancing, and dark interior all contribute to the difficulty
of supervising drug use and drunken behavior. Such environments are
designed to promote an atmosphere in which normal behavioral limits may
be relaxed to attract youth looking for a time-out experience.
Many EMDEs appear to exhibit the three key characteristics of time-out
events: reduced supervision, increased AOD availability, and peer support
for heavy AOD use. The reduced supervision not only allows heavy drinking
but also permits drunken behavior that would not otherwise be accepted.
Alcohol consumption is encouraged through ad-lib or “all you can drink”
specials and by attendees at such events who tend to be heavy drinkers and
drug users and provide strong peer support for AOD consumption. This setting is also of particular interest because the clientele are predominantly
emerging adults, the greatest at-risk period for pathological AOD use and
potential precursor to maladaptive drug use later in adulthood. Studying
young adult AOD use in the context of EMDE also provides opportunity to
explore the need for targeted preventive intervention. This article describes
the application of the portal entry and exit survey technique to EMDEs.

METHOD
OVERVIEW

From April 2003 through September 2003, pilot surveys were conducted
at six EMDEs. The primary objectives of this effort were to demonstrate that
the portal survey technique can be applied to EMDEs and to gain preliminary
evidence on the extent of AOD involvement among EMDE attendees (Miller
et al. forthcoming). The EMDEs selected constituted a convenience sample
constrained by an effort to obtain a broad set of examples of regularly scheduled events in two separate geographical locations (San Francisco and Baltimore). In concept, portal surveys can collect a random sample of attendees at
any venue that will characterize the population that attends that particular
type of EMDE. Because such events vary in the patrons they are designed to
attract (i.e., African American events, gay events), the characterization of the
total population that attends EMDEs will involve the collection of data on an
appropriate sample of the major types of events. Future efforts are designed
to collect typological information on all events and randomly select from the

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entire pool of available venues and events those to be characterized through
intercept surveys. The present study is designed to demonstrate the feasibility of the portal technique and the potential significance for AOD programs
of the collection of information on the population of EMDE attendees.
A sample of 240 attendees was drawn from the six events located in four
venues: three clubs (one location sampled twice) and one rented reception
hall where two events were sampled. Four surveys were conducted on the
West Coast in San Diego, California, and two on the East Coast in Baltimore.
Breath tests and oral fluid drug assays were conducted at both entrance and
exit to obtain biochemical analyses of the types of drugs used and the level of
use. The response rates to the original approach for participation as the subjects entered the venue ranged from 82% to 90%. Groups of attendees were
approached to participate rather than single individuals to ensure that refusals were not based on wanting to maintain an intact group. The average group
size among those who agreed to participate was 2.3. From the 240 entry participants, we completed 215 exit assessments. The primary reason for losing
25 individuals from entrance to exit was that at one club that dismissed early
(2 a.m.), attendees left simultaneously, and our survey staff was not adequate
to handle the mass exodus. Nonetheless, this experience proved to be valuable in adapting the portal survey methods employed at the border to potential time-out events within the United States, and subsequent efforts will
include additional exit staffing.
SURVEY STAFF

Most EMDEs have up to several hundred attendees; therefore, the number
that can be captured in a portal survey is principally determined by the size of
the survey staff. The size of the survey team is limited by the space available
outside the entrance to the venue and by a need to limit the numbers to avoid
having too strong a presence that might intimidate would-be respondents.
Our targeted number of respondents was 50 a night. Thus, we established a
survey staff composed of a survey manager, two interview team leaders, and
four interviewers. The tasks associated with each role are uniquely different.
The survey manager is responsible for overseeing all the presurvey and
postsurvey tasks in addition to supervising the team in the field. Before the
survey, the manager develops survey sites by building relationships with
event promoters and bar/club owners and managers, purchases supplies,
buys and/or maintains equipment, and manages administrative issues associated with staff and program management. In addition, the survey manager
gathers site- and event-specific information such as entry cover costs and the

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general cost and types of beverages (alcoholic drinks and water). During the
survey, a major task of the manager is to supervise staff and ensure adherence
to survey procedures. The survey manager also must ensure that the staff and
survey participants are safe. A log of unusual events is maintained, and where
security is an issue, the survey manager generally arranges for assistance
from the venue owner’s security staff or, alternatively, hires security for the
survey staff. The tasks following the survey range from processing the collected data, to administrative tasks involving the staff and survey, to new
event and/or site selection.
The team leaders are responsible for the data being collected by the interviewers assigned to their team (generally, there are two teams working separately: two interviewers and one team leader). The team leaders arrive an
hour before the event starts and a half-hour before the interview team arrives.
Each team leader sets up a table on which he or she places lighted clipboards
(needed given the low light at night around most venues), survey instruments,
drug swabs, oral fluid test-tracking forms, shipment bags, pens, armbands, a
table lamp, and a chair. Chairs are placed beside the processing tables for the
participants. The team leaders assign subject numbers and supply the interviewers with the survey materials (questionnaires, armbands, drug swab kits,
etc.), and they receive and complete the questionnaires and drug swab laboratory forms. In addition, they release the interview incentives to the interviewers, who in turn give the incentives to the survey participants.
The interviewers are responsible for subject selection, for winning the
participation of those they randomly approach, and for completing each of
the interview components. The interviewers are required to follow a preestablished random-selection procedure to reduce the likelihood of incorporating biases into the data set. Interviewers wear an apron in which they stock
mouthpieces, breathalyzer equipment, pens, scissors, and a light.
STAFF RECRUITMENT

Hiring capable interviewers is critical to developing a strong survey team,
as the role of an interviewer is unique and demanding. For portal surveys conducted at EMDEs, late-night and weekend hours for the survey work are
especially demanding. For the club setting, the typical hours are 9 or 10 p.m.
to 5 a.m. on weekend evenings. The setting may at first seem exciting and
interesting, but the activities involve a routine that must be carefully adhered
to and may become boring over time so that staff turnover could be high.
Although all survey personnel are expected to follow detailed survey procedures, the portal surveys also require that survey personnel quickly establish

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rapport with strangers (about 30 seconds to 1 minute) to convince individuals
to delay their entry into a party setting. As with all survey work, hiring staff
who are open, communicate easily, initiate a conversation with anyone, and
are friendly and outgoing will facilitate the process. In addition, they must be
focused and able to follow instructions, as well as be dependable and reliable.
It is helpful to have individuals who take an interest in the research itself and
are motivated to do a competent job for reasons other than just monetary
compensation. Our experience suggests that those who have worked in the
areas of sales, market research, and customer service and/or have worked as
part of a team or with groups of people possess these skills and capabilities.
Hiring and training are both time-consuming and costly; hence, it is important
to choose the interviewing staff carefully and with the understanding they will
need to learn the intricacies of conducting surveys for scientific research.
OBTAINING PERMISSION FOR SURVEYS

Before initiating a portal survey, it is important to make all of the key contacts needed to grant permission for conducting the survey. For EMDEs,
there are two major groups responsible for the events. First, there are the
organizers and promoters of the event. These individuals choose the type of
music and event, hire the disc jockeys, advertise, and establish some rules/
guidelines for the event. They may or may not be responsible for setting the
hours and for the security for the event. A second group sharing responsibility for the behaviors on the premises is the venue managers and/or owners.
These individuals may rent out the actual premises to the organizers/promoters
for an evening, but they still have considerable risk associated with what happens on premises. Most of the regulations and laws that have been proposed
for nightclub settings contain drug and/or alcohol use provisions directed at
the owner of the venue and his or her manager for the venue, not the individual renting or operating the premises on one particular evening. For that reason, many owners/managers will control the security for events, establish the
rules and regulations for the event, and generally be interested in research
studies associated with their locations.
In preparation for conducting a portal survey, researchers need to contact
the event organizers and venue managers to request their permission to conduct the survey outside their premises. In particular, it is helpful to enlist the
support and cooperation of the security staff. For many event organizers and
venue managers, involvement in research that is aimed at developing appropriate interventions for promoting safer club environments and reducing
drug use on their premises is desirable, given the legal and regulatory concerns

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they face. Furthermore, rapport can be built with the hosts if they are contacted both over the telephone and in person. In addition, the area outside of
the venue should be assessed before the event to select appropriate areas
where survey stations (a table and chairs) can be placed that (a) are proximal
to the target venue, (b) do not obstruct the flow of traffic, and (c) preclude
sampling of attendees at other venues in cases in which there are clusters of
bars and clubs.

PARTICIPATION INCENTIVES
Intercept surveys, particularly with groups on their way to events, must
generally be short (circa 5 minutes) to obtain a high participation rate. Our
EMDE surveys had more questions and more components than do most sidewalk (Johnson et al. forthcoming) or roadside interviews (Voas et al. 1997);
consequently, 10 to 15 minutes on entry and on exit were needed to complete
the interviews and biological assay collections. In the border surveys, we
were able to obtain 5-minute interviews with only candy as an incentive
(Lange, Lauer, and Voas 1999). However, to compensate for the extended
EMDE entry interview, randomly selected subjects were offered an incentive
of $5 on entry with the understanding that they could earn another $10 on exit
if they returned to the survey team and completed the exit survey. This
recruitment incentive appeared to be sufficient as our recruitment rate was
from 82% to 90% depending on location.

RECRUITMENT PROCEDURES
Intercepting and recruiting participants moving along a sidewalk, only
some of whom are headed toward the event of interest, pose some unique
problems. Informed consent to cooperate must be obtained quickly, so the
content of the consent form and the interviewer’s verbal approach must be
brief yet highly informative so that the intended respondent(s) know exactly
for whom the survey team works, what company/agency is funding the
research, how they (the respondents) were selected, and what they will be
required to do in the survey. Because these field environments are never quite
the same from one site to the next, or even at the same event from night to
night, the survey team must adapt the recruitment procedures to meet the
needs of the changed environment while maintaining the random-selection
procedures and safeguarding the subject’s rights and well-being. Generally,

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the adaptations are minor and lead to nondrastic change(s) in the
preestablished survey procedures.
A central issue is how to ensure a random selection of event attendees.
This generally involves two factors: a physical location and a time designation. The time for a new selection is determined by the point at which one of
the two survey teams completes the previous interview and is ready for the
next group. The physical location for contacting participants is generally
handled by creating an artificial line on the path to the venue, which is transparent to the potential participants but marks the location for identifying the
next group to be approached. Once the team leader determines that the interviewers in that team are prepared for the next group of respondents, the leader
proceeds to the recruiting location and selects the first individual who steps
on the predetermined recruiting line. That person defines the group to be
recruited. That person may be the first or last person in the group to have
crossed the line. The team leaders who do the recruiting are strongly advised
to be sure to take the very first person crossing the line and to concentrate on
watching the feet, rather than looking at faces, to minimize the possibility that
they permit any bias in their selection. This helps eliminate the unintentional
bias of selecting only those individuals who look approachable.
As noted, the person selected defines the group to be interviewed. All
members of the group are included because experience has shown that individuals are not willing to stay behind if the rest of their friends are going on
without them. In our pilot study, a group was considered qualified for the survey if the individual defining the group was at least 18 years of age, was willing to participate, and was attending the event of interest. Group members
younger than 18 years were not interviewed because we could not obtain
parental consent. Other members of the group who chose not to participate
were excused but did not change the group designation. In most groups, all
members participated; however, in some groups, they did not. Therefore, for
some members, we had no questionnaire or test data.
DOCUMENTING REFUSALS

Interviewers are trained to document each refusal to participate, noting
whether the refusal is the entire group they approached or one (or more) person(s) refusing within a consenting group. Whole-group refusals occur when
the interviewer approaches the person who defines the group and cannot convince that person to participate. Individual refusals occur when the defining
group member has agreed to participate but one or more individuals within
the consenting group refuse to participate. In this circumstance, the group is

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assigned a group number, and each person receives a unique individual number within the group, including the nonparticipants. Interviewers are trained
to record (a) the time of the refusal; (b) the sex, ethnicity, and age of the person refusing; and (c) a brief description as to why he or she refused.
BIOLOGICAL TESTS

A strength of the portal survey technology is that research participants can
be contacted before and after they enter the premises, and both self-report
and biological assays for AOD use can be obtained. Self-reports permit the
exploration of use before and during the event but may not be entirely reliable
indicators of substance use. The portal survey system has been successful in
documenting blood alcohol concentration (BAC) and recent drug exposure
by providing a method for gathering a breath sample and saliva sample on
entry, followed up by a second sample of each at the exit interview. A number
of breath- and saliva-collection devices are available for this purpose. We
collected the breath samples using the Intoxilyzer 400 manufactured by CMI
in Owensboro, Kentucky, which is one of a number of handheld devices
listed on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s qualified
products list for evidential breath testers. To help ensure the participant’s privacy, the instruments were specially configured to not display the participant’s result in the field; instead, a sequence number was recorded by the
interviewer on the respondent survey, and the test result was stored on an
internal microchip, to be downloaded into a data file on return to the office.
We collected the saliva samples with the Intercept Oral Fluid Drug Test
collection device, manufactured by OraSure Technologies, Inc., in
Beaverton, Oregon, which is one of a number of devices available for that
purpose. The collector consists of a swab on the end of a stick that the participant is instructed to place between the cheek and gum, swipe it back and forth
a few times, and then let it rest between the gum and cheek for at least 2 minutes. A common kitchen timer was used to measure the 2-minute period.
After 2 minutes had elapsed, the participant removed the swab from his or her
mouth, placed it in the shipping vial, broke off the stick to which the swab
was attached, and placed the cap on the vial. The vial was then handed to the
team leader who labeled it and enclosed it in a shipping bag. The collection
device was shipped to a certified laboratory for drug analysis to screen for the
presence of the National Institute on Drug Abuse–5 drugs: cocaine, opiates
(heroin), PCP, marijuana, and amphetamine (including ecstasy and methamphetamine). Negative results were reported in 24 hours. Positive results with
verification were reported in 72 hours.

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EVALUATION REVIEW / FEBRUARY 2006

Reliable breath testing requires a substance-free mouth for 15 minutes
preceding the administration of the test (including tobacco, gum, and soft
drinks). The breath test was conducted immediately following the brief introductory interview on entry or after the welcome-back interview on exit, both
of which contain a question related to breath-test readiness (substances consumed in the past 15 minutes). The breath test is followed by the saliva test,
during which the self-administered portion of the interview is completed.
Multitasking the data collection minimizes the amount of time the respondent is detained and maximizes participation.
PROVISIONS FOR ANONYMITY

For our portal surveys conducted at EMDEs, no identifying personal
information was collected. To link biological tests and survey responses for
each respondent, a unique identifier was generated that specified (a) the
event, (b) the number of the group, (c) the individual number within the
group, and (d) the total number of individuals in the group. At the entry interview, the respondent was provided with a hospital-type identity bracelet with
that unique identifying number and was asked not to remove it while inside
the event. Participants were given the option to wear it on the wrist or, to make
it less conspicuous, on the ankle or belt loop. The ID number is matched to
the entrance survey along with the breath-test device number and oral assay
number from its chain of custody (COC) form, which follows the sample to
the analysis laboratory. The COC form contains self-adhering preprinted
tabs that contain the unique COC form ID number for each sample. Sticking
that tab directly onto the respondent survey that contains the respondent ID
eliminates possible errors in transcribing the numbers and allows the entry
survey to be linked with the entry and exit biological drug tests. On exit from
the venue, the unique ID on the wristband (or ankleband) is matched with the
entry ID and recorded on the exit survey and on all forms for the breath tests
and the oral assays. At no time are participants requested to give their names
or any other personal identifying information.
DATA MANAGEMENT

The record forms used to control and match entry with exit data are shown
in Figure 1. As noted, each participant is assigned an ID number built up from
the event number, group number, and individual number within the group.
That number is assigned and recorded on the control form and on the hospitaltype bracelet by the interviewer. The control form also contains the interviewer’s

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Voas et al. / PORTAL SURVEYS OF TIME-OUT DRINKING

57

initials, the date and time of the entry or exit interview, the breath-test sequence
number, and the COC number of the saliva test. Also recorded on the entry
form is information on anyone who is approached but refuses to participate,
including identification of the group to which he or she belonged. Demographic information for nonparticipants also is estimated by the interviewer.
At the exit interview, the ID number from the hospital-type bracelet is copied
onto the exit form. In our pilot surveys, no significant objections to the bracelet were reported by the participants, although some elected to wear the
bracelet on a belt loop or ankle rather than on the wrist.
The recruiting of participants for a portal survey is limited principally by
the number of survey staff. Thus, under normal conditions, interviews are
collected at a set rate per hour, independent of the actual number of people
entering the EMDE venue. The number entering varies by the hour (earlier
and later in the evening, there are fewer new attendees), and the characteristics of early versus late arrivals may be significantly different. Therefore, it is
necessary to count all entrants as a function of time to weight the fixed number of cases per hour that can be collected by the research team. Furthermore,
because the participants are recruited in groups, it is necessary to account for
the lower within-group variance when analyzing the data by using SUDAAN
or a similar analytical program that accounts for the impact of recruiting by
groups on variance estimates.

RESULTS
This investigation sought to test the feasibility of the portal survey procedure as an assessment strategy to identify binge drinking and AOD use
among attendees at EMDEs. A brief summary of the results related to the
effectiveness of the methodology is outlined below. A full analysis of the data
is provided in a report by Miller et al. (forthcoming).
RESPONSE RATES

The response rates to the initial approach to a potential participant entering the venue ranged from 70% to 92%, with one outlier (66%; Table 1). The
average group size among those who agreed to participate was 2.3. From the
240 entry participants, we completed 219 (91%) of the exit assessments.
Among the participants completing the entry interview, 21 failed to return for
the exit interview, and for an additional 4 participants, there were missing

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EVALUATION REVIEW / FEBRUARY 2006

EXIT QUESTIONNAIRE
ID#

…
Event #

…
Group Number

of
Individual Number

(Record from wrist band)

Interviewer:

Number in Group

Date: _ _ _ _ _ /_ _ _ _ _ /2003

Time: _ _ _ _ _

: _ _ _ _ _ am

pm

Sensor #: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
CO

BAC Sample #:
Refused:

Verbal Questions _ _ _ _ _ ,

Questionnaire _ _ _ _ _ ,

Put COC Label Here

C Form #:

Breath Sample _ _ _ _ _ ,

Saliva Sample _ _ _ _ _ ,

All _ _ _ _ _

Reason for refusal: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

ENTRANCE QUESTIONNAIRE
…

ID#
Event #

…

(Put on wrist band)

of

Group Number

Individual#

Date: _ _ _ _ _ /_ _ _ _ _ /2003
_____ AGREED
COC Form #:

Interviewer:

Number in Group

Time: _ _ _ _ _ : _ _ _ _ _ am
How old are you? _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

pm

Sensor #: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Put COC Label Here

BAC Sample #:

REFUSAL
Non-Eligible

A
Male

ge
Female Ask for their age

B

W

Age/s

NA

Ethnicity
H
NA

A

H/PI

UNDERAGE
Group Refusal
Number in Group Males

B

Age/s

W

Age/s

H

Age/s

A

Age/s

H/PI

Age/s

Females
Reason:

Individual
Refusal

Sex
M

Age
F

B

Ethnicity, circle all that might apply
W
H
NA
A
H/PI

V

Q

Cicle Parts Refused
B
S
Full Survey

Reason

Figure 1: Record Forms Used to Control and Match Entry With Exit Data
NOTE: BAC = blood alcohol concentration; COC = chain of custody; M = male; F = female; under “Ethnicity”: B = Black; W = White; H = Hispanic; NA = Native American; A =
Asian; H/PI = Hawaiian/Pacific Islander; under “Circle Parts Refused”: V = verbal questions; Q = questionnaire; B = breath sample; S = saliva sample.

biological assay data. Consequently, a total of 25 participants are missing
some or all data at exit.
SAMPLE CHARACTERISTICS

Table 2 contrasts the characteristics of the 240 participants at entrance
with the 25 who were missing any exit assessments. Based on the 240 total

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59

TABLE 1: Response Rates From the Six Events

Event
1
2
3
4
5
6

Total in
Attendance

Total Approached/
Total Agreed

Response Rate

300
170
200
424
137
828

65/43
54/44
50/35
55/39
24/29
56/61

66
88
70
71
83
92

attendees, 31% were between the ages of 18 and 20 years, 39% were between
the ages of 21 and 25 years, and 30% were 26 years and older. The age range
was from 18 to 45 years. Males composed 60% of the sample. Our sample
included 60% Whites, 25% African Americans, and smaller percentages of
Native Americans (3.4%), Asians (5.2%), and Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders
(3.4%). Approximately 16% of the sample was of Hispanic ethnicity. A total
of 45% of the sample were full- or part-time students, 85% of the sample had
either full- or part-time employment, and 9% were not employed and not students. Younger attendees were significantly more likely to be students. A
greater proportion of the youngest attendees were female: 56% of the 18- to
20-year-olds, 40% of the 21- to 25-year-olds, and 21% of the 26+-year-olds.
DRUG AND ALCOHOL USE

At entrance, self-report data indicated that nearly 25% of all attendees had
some stated intention to use drugs, whereas combined biological assay and
self-report data revealed that, overall, 45% of the surveyed attendees had
used some drug before arriving at the event. Biological assays from the six
events revealed that drug use varied from a low of 13% to a high of 54% of the
attendees. Marijuana was the most common type of (self-reported) drug used
at entrance (27.5%). The bioassay reports of marijuana were lower (16.3%);
however, the bioassay measurement of marijuana is not very sensitive
because marijuana only resides in the saliva for 15 to 20 minutes. A significantly greater proportion (39%) of young attendees (aged 18-20 years) were
likely to have drugs in their systems at entrance as compared to the older
attendees: aged 21 to 25 years (20%) and 26+ years (28%). The proportion of
attendees who were found positive for alcohol use based on the breath tests
ranged from 17% to 44% in all but one event (which did not serve alcohol,

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EVALUATION REVIEW / FEBRUARY 2006

TABLE 2: Entry Characteristics

All Entering Participants ( N = 240)
Demographics
Mean age
Male
b
Student
b
Employed
Race
White
Black
Hispanic
Any alcohol and
other drug

Entry Characteristics of Those
Lost to Follow-Up (n = 15)

n

%

24.05
143
104
196

5.59
59.6
43.3
81.7

23.36
14
11
19

4.98
56.0
44.0
76.0

142
60
38

59.2
25.0
15.8

12
9
2

48.0
36.0
16.0

178

74.2

14

56.0

n

%
a

a. Standard deviation.
b. Full- or part-time.

11% positive for alcohol). Among those who were drinking, the average
BAC at entrance was 0.057.
Exit data on drugs used at the event were also available from self-report
and bioassay assessments. The type of drug use showed a wide range
between sites from a low of 20% to a high of 52%. Again, the most commonly self-reported drug used was marijuana, with 13.3% reporting marijuana use, and bioassays revealing nearly the same percentage of marijuana
use (12.9%). There was an increased use of MDMA (ecstasy) at the events,
with 4.2% self-reporting and 4.6% testing positive on the bioassays. The proportion of attendees who tested positive for alcohol use increased at exit,
ranging from 17% to 72% when all events were included and ranging from
45% to 72% when the event that did not serve alcohol was excluded. Among
those who were drinking, the average BAC on exit was 0.076.
A comparison of AOD consumption at entrance and exit for attendees
with all data revealed that less than 15% of attendees (n = 27) increased their
drug use while on premises. Table 3 outlines the various arrays of AOD consumption at entry and exit. It is important to note that half of attendees had no
change in AOD use from entry to exit, depicted by the numbers in bold. Also,
the substance of greatest increase was alcohol, with nearly 8% of attendees
arriving alcohol free but having consumed alcohol while on premises.

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Voas et al. / PORTAL SURVEYS OF TIME-OUT DRINKING

61

TABLE 3: Drug Use at Entry and Exit
Drug Use at Exit
a

Drug Use at Entry

No Alcohol Alcohol Marijuana Marijuana Drug(s)
or Drugs
Only
Only and Alcohol
Only

No alcohol or drugs
29
18
Alcohol only
14
41
Marijuana only
4
1
8
Marijuana and alcohol
3
16
2
a
Drug(s) only
2
4
a
Drug(s) and alcohol
2
2
2
Total (%)
54 (25.6) 82 (38.9) 12 (5.7)

1
1
2
5
2
10 (4.7)

1
3
8
6
19 (9.0)

a

Drug(s) and
Alcohol Total (%)
4
5
1
5
4
15
34 (16.1)

52 (24.6)
61 (28.9)
17 (8.1)
34 (16.1)
18 (8.5)
29 (13.7)
211

NOTE: Numbers in bold indicate no change in alcohol and other drug use from entry to
exit.
a. This can include marijuana users; however, these drug users were either users of
other drugs besides marijuana or polydrug users (including marijuana).

DISCUSSION
The strengths of the portal survey approach outlined in this investigation
include (a) utility as a case-finding modality to identify high-risk drinking
and AOD use among young adults in defined social settings, (b) confirmation
of self-report data via biological assay data, and (c) identification of potential
settings and strategies for preventive intervention. As a case-finding modality, we identified a high proportion of young adult drug users and heavy
drinkers. We linked drinking and drug taking to the setting and clarified how
much of the substances consumed actually occurred within the setting. Biological assays improved the precision of these estimates. This is of particular
importance given the increased levels of AOD intoxication that could potentially bias the self-report estimates. In addition, the portal study of EMDE
settings, similar to the studies of cross-border binge drinking, substantiates a
need for preventive intervention in the setting to decrease the level of highrisk drinking and drug involvement and co-occurring hazards (e.g.,
victimization, driving under the influence).
Epidemiologically, there is a range of critical information that can be
gained from the portal surveys: (a) the nature and extent of drug and alcohol
involvement among young adult attendees of EMDEs; (b) the variation in
drug and alcohol use among different racial and ethnic groups, across age and
gender, as well as across the type of events and venues; (c) personal characteristics associated with varying degrees of drug involvement, including type
of drugs used, co-occurring drug and alcohol use, and severity of drug

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EVALUATION REVIEW / FEBRUARY 2006

involvement; (d) the perceptions of attendees about the extent of AOD availability and use at the venue and their own intentions regarding drug use at the
event; (e) their self-reported and measured drug use at the event; and (f) their
experiences at the events, including victimization. This information will aid
in guiding future secondary prevention efforts designed to identify and
intervene on affected young adults.
Based on our preliminary findings from six events, clubs hosting EMDEs
are good locations for identifying the 18- to 25-year-old population that
includes both young people who are in college and young people who are
working but not in college using portal survey methods. Although the majority of the attendees were male, the youngest age group was predominantly
female. These preliminary findings indicate that the events and venues attract
drug users at different rates and that drug use on premises can be measured
and varies according to these settings. Thus, future work needs to examine
more carefully the characteristics of events and venues that are most
attractive to young drug users.
Not fully explored here were the harms associated with drug taking in
the EMDE setting. Future directions in this line of research should include
not only determining the severity of AOD use but also estimating the cooccurrence of AOD-related harm and identifying possible preventive intervention strategies that can be integrated into the portal survey to decrease
AOD expectancies for the setting and actually reduce AOD use.
Three limitations of this work merit attention. First, the current oral fluid
testing technology detects only the oral residue of marijuana from smoking
within the past 15 to 20 minutes, whereas for all other drugs under study, the
test reflects actual blood concentrations (which may have resulted from use
over a longer period of time during the past 2 days). Therefore, the biological
screen for marijuana is time limited and somewhat unreliable. This was evident in our preliminary data collection that yielded much higher proportions
of marijuana by self-report compared to bioassay. In our simultaneous testing of drug use (self-report and bioassay), we have thus made the a priori
decision that a positive report from either test will signal drug use. Emerging
technologies in drug testing are exploring rapid and noninvasive (e.g., urinetesting) assessment techniques that can reliably detect systemic marijuana
concentrations. Second, there is some debate over the procedures used to
reconnect with respondents postevent. In the current program, we learned
that it is valuable to give respondents incentives to return to the station with
additional compensation as compared to the entry incentive. We also learned
that the staffing at exit needs to be increased as the large number of attendees
exit at the same time when the venue closes, creating a backup for exit processing. Of the 240 entry respondents, 25 were lost at follow-up, and at least

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63

half of those losses were respondents who were not willing to wait at survey
stations to complete their exit assessments. Future portal surveys will therefore include increased staff at exit. The additional personnel will increase the
presence of survey staff, whose presence is easily camouflaged by the droves
of attendees leaving the venue. Finally, although event participants were
selected at random, the venue and events were not selected at random, and
thus, the results are not generalizable to the population of EMDE attendees,
only to those particular events. However, the primary purpose of this stage of
research was to establish the feasibility of the portal methodology in the context of EMDEs. There is a cross-event variation among attendees, including
features such as race, gender, and sexual orientation. The next stage of
research will use random sampling with a larger sampling of venues and
events and will include design variables to account for the clustered sample.
Portal survey methodology holds promise as an assessment and intervention strategy to be implemented near high-risk settings for binge drinking and
drug use. Future lines of inquiry will assess the feasibility of integrating this
methodology with preventive intervention strategies.

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Robert B. Voas, principal investigator on this project, is a senior research scientist at the Pacific
Institute for Research and Evaluation in Calverton, Maryland. He has conducted research on
alcohol and traffic safety for more than 30 years. He holds a doctorate in psychology from the
University of California at Los Angeles.
Debra Furr-Holden, co-principal investigator on this project, is an associate research scientist
at the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation in Calverton, Maryland. She holds a doctorate in drug and alcohol dependence epidemiology from Johns Hopkins School of Health and was
awarded a National Institute on Mental Health Fellowship (1999-2001).
Elizabeth Lauer is a senior survey manager and program director at the Pacific Institute for
Research and Evaluation in San Diego, California. She holds a B.A. in biology from Kalamazoo

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Voas et al. / PORTAL SURVEYS OF TIME-OUT DRINKING

65

College in Michigan and a certificate in emergency medical technology from San Diego City College in California.
Kristin Bright is a postdoctoral fellow and research associate at the Prevention Research Center
in Berkeley, California. She holds a doctorate in cultural anthropology from the University of
California, Santa Cruz.
Mark B. Johnson is a research scientist at the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation in
Calverton, Maryland. He holds a doctorate in social psychology from the University of Maryland at College Park.
Brenda Miller is a senior research scientist at the Prevention Research Center in Berkeley, California. She holds a doctorate in criminal justice from the State University of New York at Albany,
New York.

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