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Support #1418

Weight variable for appending all waves of USOC

Added by Arpita Ghosh over 3 years ago. Updated over 2 years ago.

Status:
Resolved
Priority:
Normal
Assignee:
-
Category:
Weights
Start date:
09/30/2020
% Done:

100%


Description

Dear User Support Team,

I hope you are doing well in these difficult times. My questions are related to this old one (https://iserswww.essex.ac.uk/support/issues/1257) but extend a little further. I am merging household and individual response files for each of the waves of 1-9 of UKHLS and then appending them together. Following the discussion in the old thread above, I understand that I should use the cross sectional adult main survey weights for each wave in my appended UKHLS files, i.e., indinus_xw for waves 1 and 2, indinub_xw for waves 3, 4, 5 and indinui_xw for waves 6, 7, 8, 9. My questions are:
1. What is the repercussion of using indinub_xw for waves 6-9 instead of indinui_xw weight, as I am concentrating on sf12mcs_dv, sf12pcs_dv etc variables which have been collected throughout all the waves?
2. I am merging the appended UKHLS file to another data set which has the independent variable that I want to use in regressions with sf12mcs_dv (for e.g.) being the dependent variable. In this case, am I right to understand that I should create a new weight (which will correspond to both the dependent and independent variables) in the final data in order to analyse?

Thank you very much for your time and consideration and I will look forward to hear from you.

Best, Arpita

#1

Updated by Alita Nandi over 3 years ago

  • Status changed from New to In Progress
  • % Done changed from 0 to 10
  • Private changed from Yes to No

Many thanks for your enquiry. The Understanding Society team is looking into it and we will get back to you as soon as we can.
Best wishes,
Understanding Society User Support Team

#2

Updated by Olena Kaminska over 3 years ago

Arpita,

Thank you for your question. 'ui' weight is better in two ways: it has higher sample size (so higher statistical power), and also represents UK population better (from wave 6 onwards) as it includes more recent immigrants. There is no advantage in using 'ub'.
If you are able to merge each of our participants to external data you should use our weights to represent the population. If you have lots of missingess in your independent variable after merging, then I would suggest to make an extra adjustment for this missingess (either through imputation or additional weighting). If you are doing this adjustment through weighting the new weighting adjustment will have to be multiplied by our weight to get the weight for your analysis.

Hope this helps,
Olena

#3

Updated by Alita Nandi over 3 years ago

  • Assignee changed from Olena Kaminska to Arpita Ghosh
  • % Done changed from 10 to 90
#4

Updated by Arpita Ghosh over 3 years ago

Dear Olena,

Thank you very much for your reply. It helps a lot.

Best, Arpita

Olena Kaminska wrote:

Arpita,

Thank you for your question. 'ui' weight is better in two ways: it has higher sample size (so higher statistical power), and also represents UK population better (from wave 6 onwards) as it includes more recent immigrants. There is no advantage in using 'ub'.
If you are able to merge each of our participants to external data you should use our weights to represent the population. If you have lots of missingess in your independent variable after merging, then I would suggest to make an extra adjustment for this missingess (either through imputation or additional weighting). If you are doing this adjustment through weighting the new weighting adjustment will have to be multiplied by our weight to get the weight for your analysis.

Hope this helps,
Olena

Arpita Ghosh wrote:

Dear User Support Team,

I hope you are doing well in these difficult times. My questions are related to this old one (https://iserswww.essex.ac.uk/support/issues/1257) but extend a little further. I am merging household and individual response files for each of the waves of 1-9 of UKHLS and then appending them together. Following the discussion in the old thread above, I understand that I should use the cross sectional adult main survey weights for each wave in my appended UKHLS files, i.e., indinus_xw for waves 1 and 2, indinub_xw for waves 3, 4, 5 and indinui_xw for waves 6, 7, 8, 9. My questions are:
1. What is the repercussion of using indinub_xw for waves 6-9 instead of indinui_xw weight, as I am concentrating on sf12mcs_dv, sf12pcs_dv etc variables which have been collected throughout all the waves?
2. I am merging the appended UKHLS file to another data set which has the independent variable that I want to use in regressions with sf12mcs_dv (for e.g.) being the dependent variable. In this case, am I right to understand that I should create a new weight (which will correspond to both the dependent and independent variables) in the final data in order to analyse?

Thank you very much for your time and consideration and I will look forward to hear from you.

Best, Arpita

#5

Updated by Alita Nandi over 3 years ago

  • Status changed from In Progress to Resolved
#6

Updated by Understanding Society User Support Team over 2 years ago

  • Assignee deleted (Arpita Ghosh)
  • % Done changed from 90 to 100

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