National Survey of Family Growth explained

The National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) is a survey conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics division of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to understand trends related to fertility, family structure, and demographics in the United States.[1]

History and details

The National Survey of Family Growth is conducted in five-year cycles. In each cycle, surveys are administered via personal interviews with people at homes. The interviewees generally comprise only the civilian, non-institutionalized population.[2]

The cycles so far have been:[3]

While Cycles 1–5 surveyed only women, Cycle 6 and later surveyed both men and women and used households as the unit of analysis. Cycle 6 surveyed 12,571 respondents 15–44 years of age: 7,643 females and 4,928 males. The 2006–2010 NSFG surveyed 22,682 interviews: over 10,000 interviews with men and more than 12,000 interviews with women.[2] In 2006, the NSFG shifted from periodic surveys to continuous interviewing. For Cycle 6 onward, the surveys were conducted in person by female interviewers who are hired and managed by the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research.[2] The survey samples are intended to be nationally representative but not necessarily representative at subnational levels (such as individual states, ethnicities, or religions).[2]

Data

For the survey cycles that have been completed, data is available both in the form of portable document format summaries and as full data files. In addition, program statements are available in SAS, SPSS, and STATA.[4]

Key statistics are also browsable online.[12]

NSFG data is also mirrored on the website of the University of Michigan's Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.[13]

Reception and impact

Claims

The NSFG website claims that the NSFG is used as follows:[2]

Academic research

The NSFG website claims that the NSFG has been cited in "more than 1,300 journal articles, NHCS reports, and book chapters shown in our bibliography."[2] The research citing the NSFG is concentrated more on topics related to family planning, contraception, abortion, and fertility.[14] [15] [16]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: National Survey of Family Growth. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. April 22, 2014.
  2. Web site: About the National Survey of Family Growth . 2024-01-07 . National Survey of Family Growth.
  3. Web site: Questionnaires, Datasets, and Related Documentation. April 22, 2014.
  4. Web site: NSFG - Cycle 1 (1973): Public Use Data Files, Codebooks, and Documentation. April 22, 2014. National Survey of Family Growth.
  5. Web site: NSFG - Cycle 2 (1976): Public Use Data Files, Codebooks, and Documentation. April 22, 2014. National Survey of Family Growth.
  6. Web site: NSFG - Cycle 3 (1982): Public Use Data Files, Codebooks, and Documentation. April 22, 2014. National Survey of Family Growth.
  7. Web site: NSFG - Cycle 4 (1988): Public Use Data Files, Codebooks, and Documentation. April 22, 2014. National Survey of Family Growth.
  8. Web site: NSFG - Cycle 5 (1995): Public Use Data Files, Codebooks, and Documentation. April 22, 2014. National Survey of Family Growth.
  9. Web site: NSFG - Cycle 6 (2002): Public Use Data Files, Codebooks, and Documentation. April 22, 2014. National Survey of Family Growth.
  10. Web site: 2006-2010 NSFG: Public Use Data Files, Codebooks, and Documentation. April 22, 2014. National Survey of Family Growth.
  11. Web site: 2019-03-04. NSFG - About the National Survey of Family Growth. 2020-08-05. www.cdc.gov. en-us.
  12. Web site: NSFG - Key Statistics. National Survey of Family Growth. April 22, 2014.
  13. Web site: National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) Series. Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research, University of Michigan. April 22, 2014.
  14. Estimates of contraceptive failure from the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth. Kost. Kathryn. Singh. Susheela. Vaughan. Barbara. Trussell. James. Bankole. Akinrinola. Contraception. 77. 1. 10–21. January 2008. 10.1016/j.contraception.2007.09.013. 18082661. 2811396.
  15. Are All Contraceptive Failures Unintended Pregnancies? Evidence from the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth. Trussell. James. Vaughan. Barbara. Stanford. Joseph. Family Planning Perspectives. 31. 5. September–October 1999. April 22, 2014.
  16. Measuring the Extent of Abortion Underreporting In the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth. Family Planning Perspectives. 30. 3. May–June 1998. April 22, 2014. Fu. Haishan. Darroch. Jacqueline E.. Henshaw. Stanley K.. Kolb. Elizabeth. 128–33, 138 . 10.2307/2991627 . 2991627 . 9635261 .