STP_2014_MICS_v01_M
Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2014
Name | Country code |
---|---|
São Tomé and Príncipe | STP |
Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey - Round 5 [hh/mics-5]
Since its inception in 1995, the Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys, known as MICS, has become the largest source of statistically sound and internationally comparable data on women and children worldwide. In countries as diverse as Costa Rica, Mali and Qatar, trained fieldwork teams conduct face-to-face interviews with household members on a variety of topics – focusing mainly on those issues that directly affect the lives of children and women. MICS has been a major source of data on the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) indicators and will be a major data source in the post-2015 era.
The Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey, Round 5 (MICS5) is the fifth round of MICS surveys, previously conducted around 1995 (MICS1), 2000 (MICS2), 2005-2007 (MICS3) and 2009-2011 (MICS4). MICS was originally developed to support countries measure progress towards an internationally agreed set of goals that emerged from the 1990 World Summit for Children.
The fifth round of Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS5) is scheduled for 2013-2016 and survey results are expected to be available from 2015 onwards. Data collected in MICS5 will play a critical role in the final assessment of the MDGs in September 2015 and subsequent surveys in MICS6 will provide the baselines for the Sustainable Development Goals that will follow.
Information on more than 130 internationally agreed-upon indicators is being collected through MICS5. In addition to collecting information on intervention coverage, MICS also explores knowledge of and attitudes to certain topics, and specific behaviors of women, men and children, enabling analysts to gain insights into behaviours that may affect women’s and children’s lives. MICS routinely disaggregates data so that disparities associated with age, gender, education, wealth, location of residence, ethnicity and other characteristics are revealed.
The Sao Tome and Principe Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) was carried out in 2014 by the National Institute of Statistics (INE) in collaboration with the National Centre for Endemic Diseases (CNE) and the UNDP/Global Fund project, as part of the global MICS programme. Technical support was provided by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and ICF International. UNICEF, the Global Fund and the Government of the Democratic Republic of Sao Tome and Principe provided financial and logistical support. The global MICS programme was developed by UNICEF in the 1990s as an international household survey programme to support countries in the collection of internationally comparable data on a wide range of indicators on the situation of children and women. MICS surveys measure key indicators that allow countries to generate data for use in policies and programmes, and to monitor progress towards the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and other internationally agreed upon commitments.
The survey provides statistically sound and internationally comparable data essential for developing evidence-based policies and programmes, and for monitoring progress toward national goals and global commitments. Among these global commitments are those emanating from the World Fit for Children Declaration and Plan of Action, the goals of the United Nations General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS, the Education for All Declaration and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
The objective of the 2014 MICS is to update some of the results of previous surveys, to evaluate the progress made with the various programmes of cooperation, and to identify remaining challenges. The survey also permitted to get an update on the sero-prevalence of HIV among men and women, anaemia among children and women, and malaria among children, measurements that were added to the standard MICS.
Sample survey data [ssd]
The scope of the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey includes:
National
The survey covered all de jure household members (usual residents), all women aged between 15-49 years, all children under 5 living in the household and all men aged between 15-49 years.
Name |
---|
United Nations Children’s Fund |
National Institute of Statistics |
UNDP/Global Fund project |
National Centre for Endemic Diseases |
Name | Role |
---|---|
ICF International | Technical support |
Name | Role |
---|---|
United Nations Children’s Fund | Financial, technical and logistical support |
Global Fund | Financial and logistical support |
Government of the Democratic Republic of Sao Tome and Principe | Financial and logistical support |
The primary objective of the sample design was to produce statistically reliable estimates of most indicators, at the national level, for urban and rural areas, for the Southern and Northern regions, and each one of the two districts of Agua Grande and Me Zochi in the Central region.
The first stage statistical units, or primary sampling units, are the enumeration areas (EAs) designed during the cartographic operations of the 2012 General Census of Population and Housing (GCPH). The list of EAs constitutes the first stage sampling frame of primary sampling units.
A sample of EAs was drawn at the first stage within each stratum. The second stage sampling units are the households within the EAs drawn at the first stage. They define the secondary stage sampling frame.
A study domain is a portion of the national territory for which valid results are sought, in other words individual estimates of sufficient precision. The districts were not chosen as study domains given their small size. Beside the urban and rural areas, four other study domains were identified. These are the district of Agua Grande, the district of Me Zochi, the Southern region comprising the districts of Cantagalo and Caue, and the Northern region comprising the districts of Lemba and Lobata. The region of Principe, which has only 11 EAs, was not regarded as a study domain.
The stratification is defined as the urban/rural area of residence within each district, which led to 13 strata.
The household sample size for the MICS5 survey was calculated as 3930 households. For the calculation of the sample size, the key indicator used was the immunization coverage of children age 12-23 months.
In order to estimate how many clusters or primary units would correspond to 900 households selected in each study domain, three options of cluster size were considered:
It was found that the first two cluster size options of 20 or 25 households did not provide the required number of clusters in certain strata. On the other hand the option of 30 households per primary unit allowed drawing the EAs in all the strata.
In the Region Autonomous of Principe, which is not a study domain, all 11 EAs have been surveyed on the basis of 30 households each, giving a national sample of 3930 households. This results in a global sample of 131 primary sampling units or clusters, 30 per study domain and 11 for the region of Principe.
The sample selection is implemented independently within each stratum. The primary sampling units or clusters are drawn systematically with probability proportional to size. The probability of selection of a cluster is proportional to the size of the cluster, the size being here defined as the number of households in the cluster from the frame.
At the second sampling stage, i.e. the selection of the households, systematic sampling with equal probability is used. An equal number of households, 30 in this case, is drawn in each cluster selected at the first stage.
The sampling of primary units is done independently one stratum at a time. As previously indicated, the EAs are drawn systematically with probability proportional to size.
The drawing of the primary units is implemented with a computer software called TIRAGE 2.1 specially designed for random sampling. In preparation for the draw, it was first verified if any of the 13 strata included atypical EAs, i.e. EAs with a selection probability greater than 1.
The sampling procedures are more fully described in "Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2014 - Final Report" pp.234-241.
Of the 3,930 households selected for the sample, 3,625 were found to be occupied. Of these, 3,492 were successfully interviewed which leads to a household response rate of 96 percent. The women's response rate was 95 percent, the men's response rate 82 percent, and the children's response rate 98 percent.
The following notation is used in the formulae determining the selection probabilities and the sample weights of the sampling units for estimates within a stratum h.
At the 1st stage, mh PSUs are drawn from stratum h systematically with probability proportional to size.
At the 2nd stage, a fixed number n of households are drawn in each sampled PSU in stratum h for the three questionnaires of the survey related to the household, the women and the children below the age of 5 years.
The questionnaires for the Generic MICS were structured questionnaires based on the MICS5 model questionnaire with some modifications and additions. Household questionnaires were administered in each household, which collected various information on household members including sex, age and relationship. The household questionnaire includes List of Household Members, Education, Child Labour, Child Discipline, Household Characteristics, Insecticide Treated Nets, Indoor Residual Spraying, Water and Sanitation, Handwashing, and Salt Iodization.
In addition to a household questionnaire, questionnaires were administered in each household for women age 15-49, men age 15-49 and children under age five. The questionnaire was administered to the mother or primary caretaker of the child.
The women's questionnaire includes Woman's Background, Access to Mass Media and Use of Information/Communication Technology, Fertility/Birth History, Desire for Last Birth, Maternal and Newborn Health, Post-natal Health Checks, Illness Symptoms, Contraception, Unmet Need, Attitudes Toward Domestic Violence, Marriage/Union, Sexual Behaviour, HIV/AIDS, Maternal Mortality, Tobacco and Alcohol Use, and Life Satisfaction.
The men's questionnaire includes Man's Background, Access to Mass Media and Use of Information/Communication Technology, Fertility, Attitudes Toward Domestic Violence, Marriage/Union, Sexual Behaviour, HIV/AIDS, Circumcision, Tobacco and Alcohol Use, and Life Satisfaction.
The children's questionnaire includes Child's age, Birth Registration, Early Childhood Development, Breastfeeding and Dietary Intake, Immunization, Care of Illness, and Anthropometry.
The blood test questionnaire includes Anaemia and malaria test for children 6-59 months of age, Anaemia and HIV test for women age 15-49 years, and HIV test for men age 15-49 years.
Start | End |
---|---|
2014-04-07 | 2014-06-18 |
Name |
---|
National Institute of Statistics |
There is one supervisor for each of the 8 data collection teams in the field.
Training for the fieldwork was conducted for 15 days between 3 and 21 March 2014. The training included lectures on interviewing techniques and the contents of the questionnaires, and mock interviews between trainees to gain practice in asking questions. Towards the end of the training period, trainees spent 7 days practicing interviewing in the district of Água Grande and Mè Zochi. The training also provided guidelines for the field-level collection and analysis of blood samples and biomarkers data, using a specifically designed manual and questionnaire.
The data were collected by eight teams; each was comprised of four interviewers, two health technicians (for anthropometry and blood sample collection), one driver, one editor and a supervisor. Fieldwork began on 7 April 2014 and was concluded on 18 June of the same year.
Data were entered using the CSPro software, Version 5.0. The data were entered on ten desktop computers, procured specifically for the purposes of the 2014 MICS, and carried out by 20 data entry operators and two data entry supervisors working in two shifts (morning and afternoon). For quality assurance purposes, all questionnaires were double-entered and internal consistency checks were performed. Procedures and standard programmes developed under the global MICS programme and adapted to the 2014 Sao Tome and Principe questionnaires were used throughout. Data processing followed rapidly the start of data collection on 14 April and was completed on 28 June 2014. Data were analyzed using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) software, Version 21. Model syntax and tabulation plans developed by UNICEF were customized and used for this purpose.
The processing of the blood samples was conducted from August to September 2014 for the malaria samples and from January to February 2015 for the HIV samples. The processing of the HIV samples was initiated after the scrambling and anonymization of the MICS data collected through the questionnaires. Blood samples were analyzed at the Hospital Ayres de Menezes Laboratory in Sao Tome and Principe. For HIV testing in particular, Elisa (Vironostika® VIH Ag/Ab) was used for all samples as a first test. Negative samples from this first testing were classified as negative whereas positive samples were subjected to a second ELISA test (Enzygnost® VIH Integral II). Positive samples from this second test were classified as positive. Discordant cases between the first and second ELISA test were reanalyzed using the two tests. Discordant cases were analyzed once again using Western Blot 2.2. Ten percent of negative cases were also subjected to another ELISA test for quality control purposes. At the end of the process, 261 samples, including all positive cases, were sent to the Centre Pasteur in Cameroon for external quality control (EQC). The results of the EQC, communicated in May 2014, coincided with those obtained in Sao Tome and Principe.
Sampling errors are a measure of the variability between the estimates from all possible samples. The extent of variability is not known exactly, but can be estimated statistically from the survey data.
The following sampling error measures are presented in this appendix for each of the selected indicators:
For the calculation of sampling errors from MICS data, programs developed in CSPro Version 5.0, SPSS Version 21 Complex Samples module and CMRJacki have been used.
The results are shown in the tables that follow. In addition to the sampling error measures described above, the tables also include weighted and unweighted counts of denominators for each indicator. Given the use of normalized weights, by comparing the weighted and unweighted counts it is possible to determine whether a particular domain has been under-sampled or over-sampled compared to the average sampling rate. If the weighted count is smaller than the unweighted count, this means that the particular domain had been over-sampled.
A series of data quality tables are available to review the quality of the data and include the following:
The results of each of these data quality tables are shown in appendix E in document "Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2014 - Final Report" pp.264-283.
UNICEF
UNICEF
http://mics.unicef.org/surveys
Cost: None
Name |
---|
United Nations Children's Fund |
Name | Affiliation | URL | |
---|---|---|---|
Childinfo | UNICEF | http://www.childinfo.org/mics4_surveys.html | mics@unicef.org |
Is signing of a confidentiality declaration required? | Confidentiality declaration text |
---|---|
yes | Users of the data agree to keep confidential all data contained in these datasets and to make no attempt to identify, trace or contact any individual whose data is included in these datasets. |
Use of the dataset must be acknowledged using a citation which would include:
Example,
United Nations Children’s Fund, National Institute of Statistics, UNDP/Global Fund project and National Centre for Endemic Diseases. São Tomé and Príncipe Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) 2014, Ref. STP_2014_MICS_v01_M. Dataset downloaded from [url] on [date].
The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.
Name | |
---|---|
Instituto Nacional de Estatística Largo das alfandegas | ine@ine.st |
UNICEF | Saotome@unicef.org |
DDI_STP_2014_MICS_v01_M_WB
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Development Data Group | The World Bank | Documentation of the DDI |
2016-11-23
Version 01 (November 2016)