South Africa - Agincourt Integrated Family Survey 2004

From 2002-2005 the Agincourt Integrated Family Survey project collected data in Limpopo Province, at the Agincourt Demographic Surveillance Site through the auspices of Philani Nutrition and Development Project. The work was funded by the National Institute on Aging under grant numbers R01 AG20275-01, P01 AG05842-14, and P30 AG024361. The project used integrated health and economic surveys in South Africa to investigate the links between health status and economic status. Our survey instruments collected data on a range of traditional and non-traditional measures of well-being including income and consumption, measures of health status (including mental health), morbidity, crime, social connectedness, intra-household relationships, and direct hedonic measures of well-being. In 2004, the households who had been interviewed in 2002 were re-interviewed (if they were willing and if they could be found), for part 1 of the second wave. In 2005, the households who were interviewed in 2003 were re-interviewed (if they were willing and if they could be found), for part 2 of the second wave. For all of the studies, the methodology for conducting the surveys was the same. The questions varied some from year to year. The crosswalk (see table of contents) identifies these variations. In study years 2003, 2004, and 2005, detailed questions in the household questionnaire about the impact of the most recent death in the household were asked of the most knowledgeable household member.

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Author Professor Anne Case Princeton University
Last Updated May 21, 2020, 12:19 (UTC)
Created March 16, 2020, 13:46 (UTC)
Release Year 2012-07-25 10:26:47