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Coverage assessment and adjustment methodology

Coverage assessment and adjustment methodology. Owen Abbott Methodology Directorate, ONS. Agenda. Introduction 2001 One Number Census 2011 Strategy The Census Coverage Survey (CCS) Estimation Overcount Adjustment Summary. What is the problem?.

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Coverage assessment and adjustment methodology

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  1. Coverage assessment and adjustment methodology Owen Abbott Methodology Directorate, ONS

  2. Agenda • Introduction • 2001 One Number Census • 2011 Strategy • The Census Coverage Survey (CCS) • Estimation • Overcount • Adjustment • Summary

  3. What is the problem? • Despite best efforts, Census won’t count every household or person • It will also count some people twice • Why is that a problem? • In 2001, we estimated that 3 million persons (6%) missed • Need robust census estimates - counts not good enough • Further problem: • The undercount is not evenly spread • Inner Cities, Deprived areas, Young persons

  4. The problem • This is a problem that all census taking countries face • We can try really hard to maximise coverage • But we will still miss households and people • So what do we do? • We must have a robust method for measuring coverage • It must provide accurate estimates at LA level • It must be an integral part of the census process

  5. The 2001 Census experience • Estimated 1.5million households missed • 3 million persons missed (most from the missing households but some from counted households) • Subsequent studies estimated a further 0.3 million missed

  6. The 2001 Census experience

  7. The 2001 Census experience

  8. The One Number Census • In 2001, One Number Census methodology was developed • Large Census Coverage Survey • Matching, Capture Recapture, Ratio estimation • Small area estimation to get LA totals • Imputation of missed households and persons • In 2011 we want to build on the ONC, as broadly it was very successful

  9. 2011 Aims and Objectives • Measure undercount • Measure overcount • Address lessons from 2001 • Take into account changes • In census design • In the population of interest • Accuracy to be as good or better than in 2001 • 0.2 per cent confidence interval nationally

  10. Census Coverage Survey 2011 Census Matching Quality Assurance Estimation Adjustment 2011 Coverage Assessment Overview

  11. The Census Coverage Survey • Key component • Similar to 2001 CCS: • Large Sample Survey • 320,000 Households • Sample of small areas (postcodes) • Focus on counting the population • 6 weeks after census day • Short paper based interview • Independent of Census

  12. The Census Coverage Survey • Sample design similar to 2001 • Two stage stratified by geography and a ‘hard to count’ index • First sample Output Areas • Then select postcodes within each OA • Sample size determined by optimal allocation • Improvements for 2011 • Sample stratified by Local Authority • More refined HtC index • Better Design variable

  13. Estimation • Estimation based on Dual System Estimation • Used mainly for wildlife applications • Requires two counts of the population • Assumptions • Independence • Homogeneity • No matching errors • Applied at very low level

  14. Estimation • Use matched Census + CCS data • DSE estimates adjustment for those missed in both Census and CCS Counted By CCS Yes No Counted Yes n11 n10 n1+ By Census No n01n00n0+ n+1n+0n++ DSE count for a postcode: n++ = n1+ n+1  n11

  15. Estimation • Generalise sample DSE estimates • Use standard ratio type estimators • Problem – not enough sample in most LAs • Solution – post-stratify LAs into groups • 2011 equivalent of Estimation Areas • Group LAs by type, not geography • Then small area model to get LA estimates

  16. Measuring Overcount • Estimate separately • Not yet developed methodology • Sources likely to be: • CCS • Matching Census data • Weight individuals in the DSEs to integrate into estimation methodology

  17. Coverage adjustment • Imputation of households and persons estimated to have been missed • Planning on similar process to that in 2001 • Model coverage probabilities • Calibrate weights • Impute households (with people) • Impute persons into counted households • Looking at improvements in modelling steps

  18. Summary • Measuring Coverage very important • Integral part of the UK Census process • In the UK looking to build on 2001: • Improvements across the board

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