Nutrition Poor Clinical Trial
Official title:
The China Health and Nutrition Survey
The China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS), an ongoing open cohort, international
collaborative project between the Carolina Population Center at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill and the National Institute for Nutrition and Health (NINH, former
National Institute of Nutrition and Food Safety) at the Chinese Center for Disease Control
and Prevention (CCDC), was designed to examine the effects of the health, nutrition, and
family planning policies and programs implemented by national and local governments and to
see how the social and economic transformation of Chinese society is affecting the health and
nutritional status of its population. The impact on nutrition and health behaviors and
outcomes is gauged by changes in community organizations and programs as well as by changes
in sets of household and individual economic, demographic, and social factors.
The survey was conducted by an international team of researchers whose backgrounds include
nutrition, public health, economics, sociology, Chinese studies, and demography. The survey
took place over a 7-day period using a multistage, random cluster process to draw a sample of
about 7,200 households with over 30,000 individuals in 15 provinces and municipal cities that
vary substantially in geography, economic development, public resources, and health
indicators. In addition, detailed community data were collected in surveys of food markets,
health facilities, family planning officials, and other social services and community
leaders.
Survey Design
The survey covers nine provinces that vary substantially in geography, economic development,
public resources, and health indicators. A multistage, random cluster process was used to
draw the samples surveyed in each of the provinces. Counties in the nine provinces were
stratified by income (low, middle, and high), and a weighted sampling scheme was used to
randomly select four counties in each province. In addition, the provincial capital and a
lower income city were selected when feasible. In two provinces, other large cities had to be
selected. Villages and townships within the counties and urban and suburban neighborhoods
within the cities were selected randomly. In 1989 to 1993 there were 190 primary sampling
units, and a new province and its sampling units were added in 1997. There are about 4,400
households in the overall survey, covering some 19,000 individuals. Follow-up levels are
high, but families that migrate from one community to a new one are not followed. Movement
within the primary sampling units and some larger urban entities is attempted.
The first round of the CHNS, including household, community, and health/family planning
facility data, was collected in 1989. Six additional panels were collected in 1991, 1993,
1997, 2000, 2004, and 2006. Since the 1993 survey, all new households formed from sample
households were added. Since 1997, new households in original communities were also added to
replace households no longer participating in the study. Also since 1997, new communities in
original provinces have been added to replace sites no longer participating. A new province
was also added in 1997 when one province was unable to participate. The dropped province
returned to the study in 2000.
The Chinese Ministry of Public Health has committed to continue this project as long as
outside support is provided to supplement the extensive support it already provides. The
research project is truly a collaborative effort, with funding with funding, expertise, and
other skills shared equally by the American and Chinese institutions in significant
collaborative effort.
The Household Survey
A complete household roster has been used as a reference for subsequent blocks of questions
on time allocation at home (e.g., child care, elderly care, other key home activities) and
economic activities. Questions on income and time allocation probe for any possible activity
each person might have engaged in during the previous year, both in and out of the formal
market. Information on water sources, construction, condition of the home, and ownership of
consumer durables is gathered from the respondent. Additional questions probe for all
possible items the household might own. Full income from market and nonmarket activities is
imputed. The detailed estimation of income that is possible using these data represents a
significant advance in the measurement of income in China. Inclusion of nonmonetary
government subsidies such as state-subsidized housing is an especially important advance.
Health Services Section
The health services section contains detailed data on insurance coverage, medical providers,
and health facilities that the household might use under selected circumstances. Questions
about accessibility, time and travel costs, and perceived quality of care are asked.
Information on illnesses and on all uses of the health system during the previous month is
collected for children under age 7, for adults between age 20 and 45 in 1989, and from all
household members in later years. Questions on immunizations, use of preventive health
services, and use of family planning services are also asked.
Individual Survey
Since 2004, all questions that have related to individual activities, lifestyle, health
status, marriage and birth history, body shape, and mass media exposure, etc., have been
moved to two sets of individual questionnaires: for adults age 18 and older and for children
and adolescents under age 18. Children age 6 and above and all adults are asked to provide
their time allocation on household chores and child care, physical activities, and soft drink
and sugared fruit drink consumption. Youths age 12 and older and all adults are asked their
smoking status; consumption of tea, coffee, and alcohol; diet; and activity level.
Adolescents age 12 and older are asked to provide their conception of their body shape. Both
adolescents age 12 and older and women under age 52 married, divorced, remarried, or widowed
with children age 6 to 18 in household are asked about mass-media exposure. Women under age
52 and who are married, divorced, remarried, or widowed are asked to provide their marriage,
pregnancy, and birth history and inter-generational linkages to parents and parents-in-law.
Adults age 55 and older are asked to provide their daily living activities and were given a
memory test.
Nutrition & Physical Examination
Three days' worth of detailed household food consumption information is collected. In
addition, individual dietary intake for three consecutive days is collected for every
household member, irrespective of age or relationship to the household head. Adults and
children receive detailed physical examinations that included weight, height, arm and head
circumference, mid-arm skinfold measurements, and blood pressure (for children age 7 and
older and all adults). Limited clinical nutrition and physical functioning data have been
collected since 1993. Activities of daily living and related information for older adults and
a new set of physical activity and inactivity data have been added for all respondents since
1997.
Community Survey
The community questionnaire (filled out for each of the primary sampling units) collects
information from a knowledgeable respondent on community infrastructure (water, transport,
electricity, communications, and so on), services (family planning, health facilities, retail
outlets), population, prevailing wages, and related variables.
Food Market Survey
In the first two surveys, state and free market data were collected. But by 1997, none of our
communities had separate state prices, so only free market stores and large stores have been
visited from then onward. In all cases, prices have been collected for a representative
basket of commodities.
Health and Family Planning Facility
In 1989, 1991, and 1993, separate visits were made to obtain in-depth data in each community
for every identified health service and family planning provider or facility. Information was
collected concerning personnel, sources of funds, services available, prices (asked
separately for insured and self-pay patients), and distance to the primary sampling units
served by the facility. A separate questionnaire was administered to the local family
planning official about family planning policies in the community. These were discontinued in
1997, but selected questions have been of these same personnel as part of the community
questionnaire since then.
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