Attachment 7: BRFSS 2019 Weighting Documentation
and Comparability Technical Documentation
BRFSS Overview and Weighting Documentation 2
Annual Questionnaire Development 5
Calculation of a Child Weight 13
Comparability Documentation for 2019 BRFSS Data 15
2019 Data Anomalies and Deviations from the Sampling Frame 15
Protocol Changes from 2018 Data Collection 16
The Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) is a collaborative project between all of the states in
the United States (US) and participating US territories and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The BRFSS is administered and supported by CDC's Population Health Surveillance Branch, under the Division
of Population Health at the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion. The BRFSS
is a system of ongoing health-related telephone surveys designed to collect data on health-related risk behaviors, chronic health conditions, and use of preventive services from the noninstitutionalized adult population (≥ 18 years) residing in the United States.
The BRFSS was initiated in 1984, with 15 states collecting surveillance data on risk behaviors through monthly
telephone interviews. Over time, the number of states participating in the survey increased; BRFSS now collects
data in all 50 states as well as the District of Columbia and participating US territories. During 2019, All 50
states, the District of Columbia, Guam, and Puerto Rico collected BRFSS data. In this document, the term
“state” is used to refer to all areas participating in the BRFSS, including the District of Columbia, Guam, and
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. New Jersey was unable to collect enough BRFSS data in 2019 to meet the
minimum requirements for inclusion in the 2019 annual aggregate data set.
BRFSS’s objective is to collect uniform state-specific data on health risk behaviors, chronic diseases and
conditions, access to health care, and use of preventive health services related to the leading causes of
death and disability in the United States. Factors assessed by the BRFSS included health status,
healthy days/health-related quality of life, health care access, exercise, inadequate sleep, chronic health
conditions, oral health, tobacco use, e-cigarettes, alcohol consumption, immunization, falls, seat belt use,
drinking and driving, breast- and cervical cancer screening, prostate cancer screening, colorectal cancer
screening, and HIV/AIDS knowledge. Since 2011, the BRFSS has been conducting both landline telephone and cellular telephone-based surveys. All the responses were self-reported; proxy interviews are not conducted
by the BRFSS. In conducting the landline telephone survey, interviewers collect data from a randomly selected
adult in a household. In conducting the cellular telephone survey, interviewers collect data from adults
answering the cellular telephones residing in a private residence or college housing. Beginning in 2014, all
adults contacted through their cellular telephone were eligible, regardless of their landline phone use (i.e.,
complete overlap).
The BRFSS field operations are managed by state health departments that follow protocols adopted by the
states, with technical assistance provided by CDC. State health departments collaborate during survey
development and conduct the interviews themselves or use contractors. The data are transmitted to CDC for
editing, processing, weighting, and analysis. An edited and weighted data file is provided to each participating
state health department for each year of data collection, and summary reports of state-specific data are prepared by CDC. State health departments use the BRFSS data for a variety of purposes, including identifying
demographic variations in health-related behaviors; designing, implementing, and evaluating public health
programs; addressing emergent and critical health issues; proposing legislation for health initiatives; and
measuring progress toward state health objectives.1 For specific examples of how state officials use the finalized
BRFSS data sets, please refer to the appropriate state information on the BRFSS website.
Health characteristics estimated from the BRFSS pertain to the noninstitutionalized adult population—aged 18
years or older—who reside in the United States. In 2019, an optional module was included to provide a measure
for several childhood health and wellness indicators, including asthma prevalence for people aged 17 years or
younger. BRFSS respondents are identified through telephone-based methods. According to the 2018 American
Community Survey (ACS), 98.5% of all occupied housing units in the United States had telephone service
available and telephone non-coverage ranged from less than 1.0% in Delaware to 2.5% in Montana.2
It is estimated that 4.0% of occupied households in Puerto Rico did not have telephone service.2
The increasing percentage of households that are abandoning their landline telephones for cellular telephones has significantly eroded the population coverage provided by landline telephone-based surveys to pre-1970s levels. The preliminary results (January to June 2019) from the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) indicate that 58.4% of adults were wireless-only.3
Using a dual-frame survey including landline and cellular telephones improved the validity, data quality, and representativeness of BRFSS data. In 2011, a new weighting methodology called iterative proportional fitting (or “raking”) 4 replaced the poststratification method to weight BRFSS data. Raking allows incorporation of cellular telephone survey data and permits the introduction of additional demographic characteristics (e.g., education level, marital status, home renter/owner) in addition to age-race/ethnicity-gender that improves the degree and extent to which the BRFSS sample properly reflects the socio-demographic make-up of individual state. The 2019 BRFSS raking method includes categories of age by gender, detailed race and ethnicity groups, education levels, marital status, regions within states, gender by race and ethnicity, telephone source, renter or owner status, and age groups by race and ethnicity. In 2019, 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, and Puerto Rico collected samples of interviews conducted by landline and cellular telephone.
Each year, the states—represented by their BRFSS coordinators and CDC—agree on the content of the
questionnaire. The BRFSS questionnaire consists of a core component, optional modules, and state-added
questions. Many questions are taken from established national surveys, such as the National Health Interview
Survey or the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. This practice allows the BRFSS to take
advantage of questions that have been tested and allows states to compare their data with those from other
surveys. Any new questions that states, federal agencies, or other entities propose as additions to the BRFSS
must go through cognitive testing and field testing before they can become part of the BRFSS questionnaire. In
addition, a majority vote of all state representatives is required before questions are adopted. The BRFSS
guidelines—agreed upon by the state representatives and CDC—specify that all states ask the core component
questions without modification. They may choose to add any, all, or none of the optional modules and may add
questions of their choosing as state-added questions.
The questionnaire has three parts:
1. Core component: A standard set of questions that all states use. Core content includes queries about current
health-related perceptions, conditions, and behaviors (e.g., health status, health care access, alcohol
consumption, tobacco use, fruits and vegetable consumptions, HIV/AIDS risks), as well as demographic
questions. The core component includes the annual core comprising questions asked each year and rotating core
questions that are included in even- and odd–numbered years.
2. Optional BRFSS modules: These are sets of questions on specific topics (e.g., pre-diabetes, diabetes, sugar sweetened beverages, excess sun exposure, caregiving, shingles, cancer survivorship) that states elect to use on
their questionnaires. Generally, CDC programs submit module questions and the states vote to adopt final
questions that can be included as optional modules. For more information, please see the questionnaire section
of the BRFSS website.
3. State-added questions: Individual states develop or acquire these questions and add them to their BRFSS
questionnaires. CDC does not edit, evaluate, or track or report responses from these questions.
The BRFSS supported 23 modules in 2019, but states limited modules and state-added questions to only the
most useful for their state program purposes, in order to keep surveys at a reasonable length. Because different
states have different needs, there is wide variation between states in terms of question totals each year. The
BRFSS implements a new questionnaire in January and usually does not change it significantly for the rest of
the year. The flexibility of state-added questions, however, does permit additions, changes, and deletions at any
time during the year.
The list of optional modules used on both the landline telephone and cellular telephone surveys is
available on the BRFSS website. In order to allow for a wider range of questions in optional modules, combined
landline telephone and cellular telephone data include up to three split versions of the questionnaire. A
split version is used when a subset of telephone numbers for data collection still followed the state sample
design, and administrators used it as the state’s BRFSS sample, but the optional modules and state-added
questions may have been different from other split-version questionnaires. For additional information on split
version questionnaires, see the 2019 module data appendix table, published with this yearly release.
The governance of the BRFSS includes a representative body of state health officials, elected by region. During
the year, the State BRFSS Coordinators Working Group meets with CDC’s BRFSS program management.
Before the beginning of the calendar year, CDC provides states with the text of the core component and the
optional modules that the BRFSS will support in the coming year. States select their optional modules and ready
any state-added questions they plan to use. Each state then constructs its own questionnaire. The order of the
questioning is always the same—interviewers ask questions from the core component first, then they ask any
questions from the optional modules, and the state-added questions. This content order ensures comparability
across states and follows the BRFSS guidelines. Generally, the only changes that the standard protocol allows
are limited insertions of state-added questions on topics related to core questions. CDC and state partners must
agree to these exceptions. In some cases, however, states have not been able to follow all set guidelines. Users
should refer to the yearly Comparability of Data document, which lists the known deviations.
Once each state finalizes its questionnaire content—consisting of the core questionnaire, optional modules, and
state-added questions—the state prepares a hard copy or electronic version of the instrument and sends it to
CDC. States use the questionnaire without changes for one calendar year, and CDC archives a copy on the
BRFSS website. If a significant portion of any state’s population does not speak English, states have the option
of translating the questionnaire into other languages. Currently, CDC provides a Spanish version of the core
questionnaire and optional modules. Specific wording of the Spanish version of the questionnaire may be
adapted by the states to fit the needs of their Hispanic populations.
In a telephone survey such as the BRFSS, a sample record is one telephone number in the list of all telephone
numbers the system randomly selects for dialing. To meet the BRFSS standard for the participating states'
sample designs, one must be able to justify sample records as a probability sample of all households with
telephones in the state. All participating areas met this criterion in 2018. Fifty-one projects used a
disproportionate stratified sample (DSS) design for their landline samples. Guam and Puerto Rico used a simple
random-sample design.
In the type of DSS design that states most commonly used in the BRFSS landline telephone sampling, the
BRFSS divides telephone numbers into two groups, or strata, which are sampled separately. The high-density
and medium-density strata contain telephone numbers that are expected to belong mostly to households.
Whether a telephone number goes into the high-density or medium-density stratum is determined by the number of listed household numbers in its hundred block, or set of 100 telephone numbers with the same area code, prefix, and first 2 digits of the suffix and all possible combinations of the last 2 digits. BRFSS puts numbers
from hundred blocks with 1 or more listed household numbers (1+ blocks, or banks) in either the high-density
stratum (listed 1+ blocks) or medium-density stratum (unlisted 1 + blocks). The BRFSS samples the two strata
to obtain a probability sample of all households with telephones.
Cellular telephone sampling frames are commercially available, and the system can call random samples of
cellular telephone numbers, but doing so requires specific protocols. The basis of the 2019 BRFSS sampling
frame is the Telecordia database of telephone exchanges (e.g., 617-492-0000 to 617-492-9999) and 1,000 banks
(e.g., 617-492-0000 to 617-492-0999). The vendor uses dedicated cellular 1,000 banks, sorted on the basis of
area code and exchange within a state. The BRFSS forms an interval—K—by dividing the population count of
telephone numbers in the frame—N—by the desired sample size— n. The BRFSS divides the frame of
telephone numbers into n intervals of size K telephone numbers. From each interval, the BRFSS draws one 10-
digit telephone number at random.
The target population (aged 18 years and older) for cellular telephone samples consists of people
residing in a private residence or college housing who have a working cellular telephone.
In the sample design, states begin with a single stratum. To provide adequate sample sizes for smaller
geographically defined populations of interest, however, many states sample disproportionately from strata that
correspond to sub-state regions. In 2019, the 47 states with geographic stratification were Alabama, Alaska,
Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois,
Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota,
Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina,
North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota,
Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin. As a precaution to protect the
confidential responses provided by the respondent, specific variables (such as sub-state geographic identifiers,
detailed race or ethnicity, and older than 80 years of age) in a given year are removed.
State health departments may directly collect data from their states or they may use a contractor. In 2019, seven state health departments collected their data in-house and the remainder contracted with other data collectors. The CDC provided samples purchased from Marketing Systems Group, Inc. (MSG) to all 53 states and
territories.
Interviewing Procedures
In 2019, 53 states or territories used Computer-Assisted Telephone Interview (CATI) systems. CDC supports
CATI programming using the Ci3 WinCATI software package. This support includes programming the core
and module questions for data collectors, providing questionnaire scripting of state-added questions for states
requiring such assistance, and contracting with a Ci3 consultant to assist states. Following guidelines provided
by the BRFSS, state health personnel or contractors conduct interviews. The core portion of the questionnaire
lasts an average of 17 minutes. Interview time for modules and state-added questions is dependent upon the
number of questions used, but generally, they add 5 to 10 minutes to the interview.
Interviewer retention is very high among states that conduct the survey in-house. The state coordinator or
interviewer supervisor conducts repeated training specific to the BRFSS. Contractors typically use interviewers
who have experience conducting telephone surveys, but these interviewers are given additional training on the
BRFSS questionnaire and procedures before they are approved to work on the BRFSS.
The BRFSS protocols require evaluation of interviewer performance. All BRFSS surveillance sites
have the capability to monitor their interviewers. Interviewer-monitoring systems vary from listening to the
interviewer only at an on-site location to listening to both the interviewer and respondent at remote locations.
Some states also use verification callbacks in addition to direct monitoring. Contractors typically conducted
systematic monitoring of each interviewer a certain amount of time each month. All states had the capability to
tabulate disposition code frequencies by interviewer. These data were the primary means for quantifying
interviewer performance.
States conducted telephone interviews during each calendar month. They made calls 7 days per week, during
both daytime and evening hours. They followed standard BRFSS procedures for rotation of calls over days of
the week and time of day. Detailed information on interview response rates is available in the BRFSS 2019
Summary Data Quality Report.
Preparing for Data Collection and Data Processing
Data processing is an integral part of any survey. Because states collect and submit data to CDC each month,
the BRFSS performs routine data processing tasks on an ongoing basis. Once the final version of the new
questionnaire becomes available each year, CDC staff take steps to prepare for the next cycles of data
collection. These steps include developing edit specifications, programming portions of the Ci3 WinCATI
software, programming the editing software, and producing telephone sample estimates as requested by states
and ordering the sample from the contract vendor. CDC produces a Ci3 WinCATI data entry module for each
state that requests it. CDC staff also must incorporate skip patterns, together with some consistency edits, and
response-code range checks into the CATI system. These edits and skip patterns serve to reduce interviewer,
data entry, and skip errors. Developers prepare data conversion tables that help processors read the survey data
from the entry module, call information from the sample tracking module, and combine information into the
final format for that data year. CDC also creates and distributes a Windows-based editing program that can
perform data validations on files with proper survey result formats. This program helps users with output lists of
errors or warns users about conditions of concern that may exist in the data.
CDC begins to process data for the survey year as soon as states (or their contractors) begin submitting data to
the data management mailbox. Data processing continues throughout the survey year. CDC receives and tracks
monthly data submissions from the states. Once data are received from a state, CDC staff run editing programs
and cumulative data quality checks and note any problems in the files. A CDC programmer works with each
state until any problems are optimally resolved. CDC staff generate data quality reports and share them with
state coordinators, who review the reports and discuss any potential problems. Once CDC receives and validates
the entire year of data for a state, processors run several year-end programs on the data. These programs
perform some additional, limited data cleanup and fixes specific to each state and data year and produce reports
that identify potential analytic problems with the data set. Once this step is completed, data are ready for
assigning weights and adding calculated variables. Calculated variables are created for the benefit of users and
can be noted in the data set by the leading underscore in the variable name. The following calculated variables
are examples of results from this procedure:
• _RFSMOK3
• _TOTINDA
• _HCVU651.
• _AGE80
• _FLUSHOT7
For more information, see the Calculated Variables and Risk Factors in Data Files document. Several
variables from the data file are used to create these variables in a process that varies in complexity. Some are
based only on combined codes, while others require sorting and combining of particular codes from multiple
variables.
Almost every variable derived from the BRFSS interview has a code category labeled refused and assigned
values of 9, 99, or 999. These values may also be used to represent missing responses. Missing responses may
be due to non-interviews (a non-interview response results when an interview ends prior to this question and an
interviewer codes the remaining responses as refused) and missing responses due to skip patterns in the
questionnaire. This code, however, may capture some questions that were supposed to have answers, but for
some reason do not have them, and appeared as a blank or another symbol. Combining these types of responses
into a single code requires vigilance on the part of data file users who wish to separate (1) results of respondents
who did not receive a particular question and (2) results from respondents who, after receiving the question,
gave an unclear answer or refused to answer it.
Weighting the Data
The BRFSS is designed to obtain sample information on the population of interest i.e., the adult US population
residing in different states. Data weighting helps make sample data more representative of the population from
which the data were collected. BRFSS data weights incorporate the design of BRFSS survey and characteristics of the
population. BRFSS weighting methodology comprises 1) design factors or design weight, and 2) some form of demographic adjustment of the population—by iterative proportional fitting or raking.
The design weight accounts for the probability of selection and adjusts for nonresponse bias and non-coverage
errors. Design weights are calculated using the weight of each geographic stratum (_STRWT), the number of
phones within a household (NUMPHON2), and the number of adults aged 18 years and older in the
respondent’s household (NUMADULT). For cellphone respondents, both NUMPHON2 and NUMADULT are
set to 1. The formula for the design weight is
Design Weight = _STRWT * (1/NUMPHON3) * NUMADULT
The stratum weight (_STRWT) accounts for differences in the probability of selection among strata (subsets of
area code or prefix combinations). It is the inverse of the sampling fraction of each stratum. There is rarely a
complete correspondence between strata (which are defined by subsets of area code or prefix combinations) and
regions—which are defined by the boundaries of government entities.
BRFSS calculates the stratum weight (_STRWT) using the following items:
• Number of available records (NRECSTR) and the number of records users select (NRECSEL)
within each geographic strata and density strata.
• Geographic strata (GEOSTR), which may be the entire state or a geographic subset (e.g.,
counties, census tracts).
• Density strata (_DENSTR) indicating the density of the phone numbers for a given block of
numbers as listed or not listed.
Within each _GEOSTR*_DENSTR combination, BRFSS calculates the stratum weight (_STRWT) from the
average of the NRECSTR and the sum of all sample records used to produce the NRECSEL. The stratum weight
is equal to NRECSTR/NRECSEL.
The complete overlapping sample frames required an adjustment to address the respondent’s probability of
selection in both the landline and cell phone sample frame. A compositing factor was calculated for dual users
in landline and cell phone sample frames. The design weight is adjusted by the compositing factor for the
records in the overlapping sample frames and later truncated based on quartiles. The adjusted and truncated
design weight was used as the raking input weight.
BRFSS uses iterative proportional fitting, or raking, to adjust for demographic differences between those
persons who are sampled and the population that they represent. After combining landline and cellular telephone
data, BRFSS performs raking by adjusting one or a combination of demographic categories at a time in an
iterative process until a convergence of a set value is reached. The BRFSS rakes the design weight to 8 margins
(gender by age group, race or ethnicity, education, marital status, tenure, gender by race or ethnicity, age group by race or ethnicity, and phone ownership). If the state had geographic regions, it includes 4 additional margins
(region, region by age group, region by gender, and region by race or ethnicity). If the state had at least 1 county
with 500 or more respondents, the BRFSS includes 4 additional margins (county, county by age group, county by
gender, and county by race or ethnicity). BRFSS, therefore, uses the adjusted and truncated design weight for
raking and produces _LLCPWT—the final weight assigned to each respondent.
The population estimates obtained for building the target totals for raking are from similar sources used in
previous years. Intercensal population estimates were purchased from Claritas, LLC at the county-level for age,
race or ethnicity, and gender. These population estimates are used as the population totals for a state across all
margins. The 5-year year American Community Survey PUMS data set (2014–2018) was used to obtain
estimates for margins 3, 4, and 5 (education, marital status, tenure). The noninstitutionalized adults were
weighted by the person-level weights to generate the population estimates. The percentages were then used in
the raking margins. The telephone ownership estimates for margin 8 were taken from the state wireless estimate percentages produced by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).
The BRFSS calculates the design weight for child weighting from the stratum weight times the inverse of the
number of residential landline telephones in the household and then multiplies by the number of children:
Child Design Weight = _STRWT * (1/NUMPHON3) * CHILDREN
CHIILDWT = BRFSS rakes the child design weight to 5 margins including age by gender, race or
ethnicity, gender by race or ethnicity, age by race or ethnicity, and phone ownership.
_CLLCPWT is the weight assigned for each child interview.
1. Remington PL, Smith MY, Williamson DF, Anda RF, Gentry EM, Hogelin GC. Design, characteristics,
and usefulness of state-based behavioral risk factor surveillance: 1981-87. Public health reports
(Washington, D.C.: 1974). 1988;103(4):366-375.
2. Federal Communications Commission USA. Universal Service Monitoring Report. 2019;
https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-362272A1.pdf
3. Blumberg SJ, Luke JV. Wireless substitution: Early release of estimates from the National Health
Interview Survey, January–June 2019. National Center for Health Statistics. May 2020. Available from:
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhis/earlyrelease/wireless202005-508.pdf Accessed July 2020.
4. MP B. Improving Standard Poststratification Techniques for Random-Digit-Dialing Telephone Surveys.
Surv Res Methods. 2008;2(1):9.
2019 Data Anomalies and Deviations from the Sampling Frame
The BRFSS state-based annual sample designs are fixed for the data collection year beginning in
January in all the states or territories. The samples are drawn quarterly and screened monthly to provide
a representative sample for monthly data collection. The intent of the monthly sample is to use it for 1
month, but in most states, it took more than 1 month to complete data collection using the monthly
sample. In several instances, states used their monthly sample during a period of several months. This
deviation will disproportionately affect analyses based on monthly (rather than annual) data. California
continued to receive its sample quarterly rather than monthly, allowing staff to keep their sample active
across three or more months. Michigan received the first quarterly sample of 2019 and then changed to
a monthly sample for the remainder of 2019.
Several states conducted fewer than 12 monthly data collections during the year. The following states
did not collect landline data for one or two months, as noted: Maryland (January), Montana (January),
and Nevada (December). Some states did not collect landline data for three or more months: Arkansas
(January, February, March), DC (January, February, March, April), Georgia (January, February,
March, July, August, September), Idaho (January, February, March), New Hampshire (January,
February, September), North Carolina (April, May, August), North Dakota (August, September,
November, December), and Puerto Rico (July through December).
The following states did not collect cellphone data for one or two months, as noted: Kansas
(December), Maryland (January), Montana (January), Nevada (December), North Dakota (March,
April), Wisconsin (December), Guam (December). Some states did not collect cellphone data for three
or more months Arkansas (January, February, March), DC (January, February, March, April), Georgia
(January, February, March, July, August, September), Idaho (January, February, March), New
Hampshire (January, February, September), North Carolina (April, May, August), and Puerto Rico
2
(October, November, December).
Twenty-seven states, DC, Guam, and Puerto Rico were unable to close out their 2019 sample by
December 31, 2019 and continued data collection into early 2020.
The US Virgin Islands did not collect data in 2019.
New Jersey collected data only in September and did not meet requirements of a minimum of six
months of data collection to be included in the 2019 aggregate data set.
DC began data collection in May. Georgia collected data in April, May, and June and then again in
October, November, and December. Idaho began data collection in April. The months of data collection
missed in both situations will likely affect seasonal estimates, i.e. influenza. Although both met
minimum requirements to be included in the public-use data set, please consider the differences in
collection when comparing estimates across years.
In order to improve efficiency in calling, a new precall status on the cell phone sample was added
beginning in November. The cell phone numbers with the PRECALL status = 9 (temp out of service)
were not required to be dialed as part of the sample.
Protocol Changes from 2018 Data Collection
1. Cellular Telephone Data
Telephone coverage varies by state and also by subpopulation. According to the 2017 American
Community Survey (ACS), 98.5% of all occupied housing units in the United States had telephone
service available and telephone non-coverage ranged from 1.0% in New Jersey, Rhode Island, and
Washington to 3.0% in DC. It was estimated that 4.0% of occupied households in Puerto Rico did not
have telephone service.
3 The percentage of households using only cellular telephones has been steadily
increasing—58.4% of all adults lived in households with only cellular telephones in 2019.
4 The
increased use of cellular telephones required the BRFSS to begin to include the population of cellular
telephone users in 2011. At that time, all adult cellular telephone respondents who had a landline
telephone were not eligible for the survey. In 2012, the BRFSS changed the screening process. Cellular
telephone respondents were eligible—even if they had landline phones—as long as they received at least
90% of all calls on their cell phones. Beginning in 2014, all adults contacted through their personal
(nonbusiness) phone numbers were eligible regardless of their landline phone use (i.e., complete
overlap).
Since 2011, the BRFSS has used the weighting methodology called iterative proportional fitting (IPF) or
raking to weight data. Raking allows incorporation of cellular telephone survey data, and it permits the
introduction of additional demographic characteristics that more accurately match sample distributions
to known demographic characteristics of populations at the state level. (Refer to the BRFSS website for
more information on methodologic changes). Raking adjusts the estimates within each state using the
margins (raking control variables). The raking method applies a proportional adjustment to the weights
3
of the cases that belong to the same category of the margin. The iteration (up to 100 times) continues
until a convergence to within a target percentage difference is achieved. Since 2013, up to 16 raking
margins have been used in the following order—county by gender, county by age, county by race or
ethnicity, county, region by race or ethnicity, region by gender, region by age, region, telephone service
(landline, cellular telephone or dual user), age by race or ethnicity, gender by race or ethnicity, tenure
(rent or own), marital status, education, race or ethnicity, and gender by age.
Since 2014, the inclusion of all adult cellular telephone respondents in the survey required an adjustment
to the design weights to account for the overlapping sample frames. A compositing factor was calculated
from each of the two samples (landline and cellular sample) for dual users—individuals who had both
cellular telephone and landline phone. The BRFSS multiplied the design weight by the compositing
factor to generate a composite weight for the records in the overlapping sample frame. Later the design
weight was truncated based on quartiles within geographic region (or state). In 2019, the truncated
weight was adjusted to regional (or state) population and the state phone source proportions prior to
raking. This adjusted weight was used as the input weight for the first raking margin. At the last step of
the raking process, weight trimming was used to increase the value of extremely low weights and
decrease the value of extremely high weights. Weight trimming is based on two alternative methods,
IGCV (Individual and Global Cap Value) and MCV (Margin Cap Value).
As in previous years, the data from an optional module were included if interviewers asked module
questions to all eligible respondents within a state for the entire data collection year. A state may have
indicated the use of an optional module. If the module was not used for the entire data collection year,
the data were moved into the state-added questions section. Several states collected data with optional
modules by landline telephone and cellular telephone surveys.
During the 2019 data collection process, South Carolina included several incorrect skip patterns during
the first six months of data collection. Inappropriate responses were set to missing and records that did
not collect the number of cell phones within the household were coded as partial complete interviews.
A single data collector incorrectly allowed responses of 199, 299, 399 for the fruits and vegetables
section question. The first number references day/week/month and the last two digits are supposed to
be number of times. This implies 101 would be once a day, and 201 would be once a week.
The 199 coding resulted from respondents who said that they ate/drank something every day, but then
did not give the number of times per day. Similar interpretations for the 299 (weekly but not the
number of times per week). These responses were set to missing at the request of the program.
CDC has also provided limited technical support for the survey data collection of multiple (up to three
in 2019) questionnaire versions. A state may ask a subset of its survey sample a different set of
questions following the core, as long as the survey meets the minimum effective sample size (2,500
participants) for a given questionnaire version. States must use the core instrument without making
any changes to it in any of their versions of the overall questionnaire. States can include an optional
module on all versions or exclusively on a single version but, once a state chooses to use an optional
module, the state must ask the module questions throughout the data collection year. The objective of
the multiple-version questionnaire is to ask more questions, on additional topics, within a statewide
4
sample. In 2019, 16 states conducted multiple-questionnaire-version surveys on both their landline
telephone and cellular telephone surveys. Data users can find version-specific data sets and additional
documentation regarding module data analysis in the 2019 BRFSS Survey Data and Documentation.
A 2012 change to the final disposition code assignment rules modified the requirements for a partially
complete interview. If a participant terminated an interview during or after the demographics section,
the BRFSS coded it as a partial-complete. The coding of questions was discontinued at the point of
interview termination. When determining which records to include in any analysis, data users should
account for participants’ missing and refused values. Beginning in 2015, questions in the demographic
section were reordered and the definition of partial-complete changed. A partially complete
disposition code was assigned if the interview terminated before completion of the survey and the
selected respondent completed the demographics section through question 9 for a cell phone interview
and question 12 for a landline interview.
More information about survey item nonresponse can be found in the 2019 BRFSS Summary
Data Quality Report and in the respective states’ Data Quality Reports.
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Pierannunzi, Carol (CDC/DDNID/NCCDPHP/DPH) |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2022-09-12 |