Ghana - Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2011
Reference ID | DDI-GHA-GSS-MICS-2011-v1.0 |
Year | 2011 |
Country | Ghana |
Producer(s) | Ghana Statistical Service - Autonomous |
Sponsor(s) | United Nations Children's Fund - UNICEF - Funding agency United States Agency for International Development - USAID - Funding agency US) President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief - - Provided funding ICF Macro - - Provided funding |
Metadata | Documentation in PDF |
Created on
Feb 14, 2013
Last modified
Mar 14, 2016
Page views
1144608
Data Collection
Data Collection Dates
Start | End | Cycle |
---|---|---|
2011-10-17 | 2011-12-02 | 5 years |
Data Collection Mode
Face-to-face [f2f]
Data Collection Notes
Twenty (20) field teams were formed for the data collection. Each team was made up of a supervisor, an editor, three interviewers, a health personnel (malaria biomarker) and a driver. There were a series of field monitoring visits during which completed questionnaires were verified to ensure consistency and completeness.
Questionnaires
Four main questionnaires were used for the MICS 2011 data collection:
1. Household information: Individual members, head of household, sex, age, marital
status, relation to head of household, education, water and sanitation, working
children, child discipline, disability and salt iodization
2. Children under 5 years: breastfeeding, care of illness, malaria, immunization, anthropometry, anaemia and malaria testing
3. Women 15-49 years: infant/child mortality, tetanus toxoid, maternal and newborn health, marriage/union, contraception, female genital mutilation, attitude towards domestic violence, sexual behavior, and HIV/AIDS
4. Men 15-49 years: reproduction, marriage, sexual behavior, HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted infections and attitudes toward domestic violence
Data Collectors
Name | Abbreviation | Affiliation |
---|---|---|
Ghana Statistical Service | GSS |
Supervision
Field supervisors, played a vital role in the survey field operations. They mediated between the Field Interviewers who collected the required information and the Survey Secretariat where the MICS 2011 was managed from.
Supervisors worked with three (3) Field Interviewers, One (1) Field Editor and One (1) Health Technician (Malaria Biomarker).
Supervisors were to oversee the work of interviewers and assist them with the identification of selected households and carry out any protocols needed to solicit the cooperation of respondents. Interviewers were to administer the questionnaires (Household, Women, Children under five and Men) to selected households assigned to them.
Supervisors were also to assist interviewers with the estimation of the ages of respondents who could not readily recall their ages but who could recall some historical events to guide the estimation of their ages.
To ensure good quality data from the field, the editor was to review all completed questionnaires to ensure cosnsitency and completeness.
There were field monitoring/supervisory visits by personnel from the survey secretariat to verify the work of the teams in the field. This was also to ensure the collection of quality data.