Korean J Prev Med.  2002 May;35(2):136-140.

An Approach to Survey Data with Nonresponse: Evaluation of KEPEC Data with BMI

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Statistics, Seoul National University College of Natural Science, Korea.
  • 2Department of Informetrics and Statistics, Daejun University College of Natural Science, Korea.
  • 3Department of Preventive Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Korea.

Abstract


OBJECTIVES
A common problem with analyzing survey data involves incomplete data with either a nonresponse or missing data. The mail questionnaire survey conducted for collecting lifestyle variables on the members of the Korean Elderly Phamacoepidemiologic Cohort(KEPEC) in 1996 contains some nonresponse or missing data. The proper statistical method was applied to evaluate the missing pattern of a specific KEPEC data, which had no missing data in the independent variable and missing data in the response variable, BMI.
METHODS
The number of study subjects was 8,689 elderly people. Initially, the BMI and significant variables that influenced the BMI were categorized. After fitting the log-linear model, the probabilities of the people on each category were estimated. The EM algorithm was implemented using a log-linear model to determine the missing mechanism causing the nonresponse.
RESULTS
Age, smoking status, and a preference of spicy hot food were chosen as variables that influenced the BMI. As a result of fitting the nonignorable and ignorable nonresponse log-linear model considering these variables, the difference in the deviance in these two models was 0.0034(df=1).
CONCLUSION
There is a lot of risk if an inference regarding the variables and large samples is made without considering the pattern of missing data. On the basis of these results, the missing data occurring in the BMI is the ignorable nonresponse. Therefore, when analyzing the BMI in KEPEC data, the inference can be made about the data without considering the missing data.

Keyword

Algorithm; Questionnaire; Log-linear Models; Body Mass Index; Korean Elderly Pharmacoepidemiologic Cohort

MeSH Terms

Aged
Body Mass Index
Humans
Life Style
Linear Models
Postal Service
Surveys and Questionnaires
Smoke
Smoking
Smoke
Full Text Links
  • KJPM
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr