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    Home / Central Data Catalog / BRB_2012_MICS_V01_M / variable [F1]
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Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2012

Barbados, 2012
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Reference ID
BRB_2012_MICS_v01_M
Producer(s)
United Nations Children’s Fund, Barbados Statistical Service
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
Study website
Created on
Jan 29, 2016
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
Page views
29260
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  • ch
  • hh
  • hl
  • wm

Child drank less or more during illness (CA2)

Data file: ch

Overview

Valid: 28
Invalid: 463
Type: Discrete
Decimal: 0
Start: 122
End: 122
Width: 1
Range: -
Format:

Questions and instructions

Literal question
I would like to know how much (name) was given to drink during the diarrhoea (including breastmilk).
During the time (name) had diarrhoea, was he/she given less than usual to drink, about the same amount, or more than usual?
Categories
Value Category
1 Much less
2 Somewhat less
3 About the same
4 More
5 Nothing to drink
8 DK
9 Missing
Sysmiss
Warning: these figures indicate the number of cases found in the data file. They cannot be interpreted as summary statistics of the population of interest.
Interviewer instructions
If dehydrated, a child may take more fluids than usual. We want to know if the pattern of fluid consumption changed during diarrhoea. The focus in this question is on how much fluid was actually consumed by the child.

Ask the question just as it is worded here. Read out the entire question and circle the appropriate code for the caretaker's response. Get the respondent's best judgement of the relative amount of total fluids actually consumed by the child. All fluids are included, not just special ones given during diarrhoea. For example, water, tea, fruit juice, breastmilk and formula are included as well as special fluids such as ORS.

If the child was given less drink than usual during the diarrhoea, probe: “Was he/she given much less than usual to drink, or somewhat less?”

Try to find out what actually happened, not what the respondent thinks ought to have happened. An answer such as, “A child with diarrhoea (or 'a child who is ill') needs more fluids” is not satisfactory. You would need to ask, “But how much did your child actually drink during this diarrhoea?”

It may be difficult to estimate the relative amount of breastmilk taken by the child. The respondent may make an estimate based on whether the child nursed longer or more frequently.
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