Ghana - World Health Survey 2003, Wave 0
Reference ID | GHA_2003_WHS_v01_M |
Year | 2003 |
Country | Ghana |
Producer(s) | World Health Organization (WHO) |
Sponsor(s) | World Health Organization - WHO - |
Created on
Feb 13, 2013
Last modified
Dec 05, 2013
Page views
775642
R-Vignette - Set C Q-5
(q7505c)
File: WHS-Ghana_F5
File: WHS-Ghana_F5
Overview
Type:
Discrete Format: numeric Width: 4 Decimals: 2 Range: 1-5 | Valid cases: 645 Invalid: 3293 |
Questions and instructions
I am now going to read you stories about people's experiences with health care services. I wanted you to think about these people's experiences as if they were your own. Once I have finished reading each story, I will ask you to rate what happened in th estory as very good, good, moderate, bad or very bad.
Use in vignettes country specific female/male first names to match sex of the respondent (with exceptions specified in the "Guide to Administration and Question by Question Specifications").
[Rebecca] usually spoke to her doctor about her illness in complete privacy. Once [Rebecca] heard that the doctor spoke to [Rebecca’s] friend about her
illness. She asked her doctor not to do it again. He did not do it again.
Use in vignettes country specific female/male first names to match sex of the respondent (with exceptions specified in the "Guide to Administration and Question by Question Specifications").
[Rebecca] usually spoke to her doctor about her illness in complete privacy. Once [Rebecca] heard that the doctor spoke to [Rebecca’s] friend about her
illness. She asked her doctor not to do it again. He did not do it again.
How would you rate the way the health services ensured [Rebecca] could
talk privately to health care providers?
talk privately to health care providers?
Value | Category | Cases | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Very good | 50 | 7.8% |
2 | Good | 159 | 24.7% |
3 | Moderate | 106 | 16.4% |
4 | Bad | 175 | 27.1% |
5 | Very bad | 155 | 24.0% |
Sysmiss | 3293 |
Warning: these figures indicate the number of cases found in the data file. They cannot be interpreted as summary statistics of the population of interest.