DOM_2021_HFPS-W2_v02_M
COVID-19 LAC High Frequency Phone Surveys 2021, Wave 2
Name | Country code |
---|---|
Dominican Republic | DOM |
Socio-Economic/Monitoring Survey [hh/sems]
These surveys are the final delivery of the series of LAC: COVID-19 High Frequency Monitoring Project (Phase1 - P173987) & (Phase 2- P175839).
After implementing Phase 1 of the High-Frequency Phone Survey (HFPS) project in Latin America and The Caribbean in 2020, the World Bank conducted Phase 2 in 2021 to continue to assess the socio-economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on households. This new phase, conducted in partnership with the UNDP LAC Chief Economist office, included two waves. Wave 1 covering 24 countries. Wave 2 collected between October and December 2022, covering 22 countries. Of these countries, 13 participated in Phase 1: Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Chile, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Paraguay and Peru. Countries that joined in Phase 2 are: Antigua & Barbuda and Brazil (only in Wave 1), Belize, Dominica, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Panama, St. Lucia and Uruguay.
This study presents information from 23 countries for which data was collected between May and July 2021. Brazil was integrated into the LAC HFPS Phase 2 project at a later point and was implemented with a slightly different approach. See the project information here: https://microdata.worldbank.org/index.php/catalog/4533. For information on the LAC HFPS Phase 1, see here:
https://pubdocs.worldbank.org/en/238561622829862035/HFPS-TECHNICAL-NOTE-MAY2021-FINAL.pdf
Households and individuals of 18 years of age and older.
Edited, anonymized dataset for public distribution.
2023-01-09
The new version is a cleaner version of the previous for surveys included in COVID-19 LAC High Frequency Phone Surveys 2021, Wave 2. Version update includes: a) For the data: removal of variables containing all missing values that were created when modules were not applicable to the country. These variables should have been omitted from the previous version, they were dropped from the updated version; and b) For the supporting documents: removal of color coding used for proofreading questionnaires and modules and certain questions not implemented in the field; and a formatted version of the note describing the sampling procedure.
The 2021 HFPS collects information on changes in employment and income, prevalence of food insecurity, access to health, education, and financing services. This allows users to compare certain indicators of living conditions of households and individuals with the 2020 HFPS. Additionally, the 2021 phase gathered information on access and use of internet and digital banking services, gender issues, mental health, coping mechanisms and childcare. As in the first phase, the surveys are representative of individuals of 18 years of age or above who have an active cellphone number or a landline at home. An improvement in the sampling methodology also allows for the data of Phase 2 Wave 2 to be representative of school-age children and adolescents for the education module, and childcare for children up to 5 years old. Finally, in Wave 2, a representative sample of minorities was obtained in seven countries (Bolivia, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama, Dominican Republic, Peru, and Colombia).
Eligible respondents for the HFPS were adults 18 years old and above. Only one respondent per household was interviewed, and he/she answered individual, child and household-level questions.
National level
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Gabriel Lara Ibarra | The World Bank Group |
Carolina Mejia-Mantilla | The World Bank Group |
Adriana Camacho | United Nations Development Programme |
Javier Romero | The World Bank Group |
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Innovations for Poverty Actions | Private vendor | Survey collection |
Sistemas Integrales | Private vendor | Supervision and quality control |
Name | Role |
---|---|
The World Bank Group | Funder |
United Nations Development Programme | Funder |
The size of the Phase 2 Wave 2 overall (cell phones and landlines) selected sample of phone numbers (i.e., before any fieldwork activities) in each of the Original Countries (i.e. the 13 countries included in LAC HFPS Phase 1) is equal to the Phase 1 Wave 1 overall selected sample of phone numbers, plus the Phase 2 Wave 1 overall supplement fresh sample, plus the Phase 2 Wave 2 overall supplement fresh sample of phone numbers.
The samples of the Added Countries (i.e. those only included in Phase 2) is based on a dual frame of cell phone and landline numbers generated through a Random Digit Dialing (RDD) process. In the first phase, a large sample was selected in both frames, and then screened through an automated process to identify the active, eligible numbers. A smaller second-phase sample was selected from the active residential numbers from in the first-phase sample and was delivered to the country teams. Please see Sampling Design and Weighting document for more detail.
HFPS Phase 2 has three units of analysis: households, adult individuals (18 years of age and older), children 0-5 years old, and children 6 through 17 years of age. Weights were computed for each sample unit and should be used according to the estimate of interest.
The weighting process for the 13 Countries included in LAC HFPS Phase 1 involve five steps:
The sample design and weighting procedures for new countries are the same ones used for the Original Countries in Phase 1 Wave 1. For a detailed description, see https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/336371631859678760/pdf/COVID-19-High-Frequency-Phone-Surveys-in-Latin-America-Technical-Note-on-Sampling-Design-Weighting-and-Estimation.pdf
Questionnaires are available for download in language of data collection for each country (i.e. Spanish, English, French).
Start | End | Cycle |
---|---|---|
2021-10-11 | 2022-01-11 | Wave 2 |
Sistemas integrales jointly with the World Bank and UNDP teams were in charge of all supervision activities.
In wave 2, the project collected information from individuals who were also interviewed in Wave 1. Due to attrition, not all individuals who participated in Wave 1 were re-interviewed. Individuals who were interviewed in both waves can be identified through the variable "tipo_muestra". Relatedly, in a few cases individuals provided answers in Wave 2 that were not fully consistent with the answers provided in Wave 1. Such potential inconsistencies are flagged through dummies in the dataset.
Name |
---|
Poverty Reduction and Policy Management Network (PREM) |
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Gabriel Lara Ibarra | Senior Economist ELCPV |
Carolina Mejía-Mantilla | Senior Economist ELCPV |
World Bank and UNDP (2022). Dominican Republic Covid-19 High-Frequency Phone Surveys 2021, Wave 2. Ref: DOM_2021_HFPS-W2_v02_M. Washington DC. Dataset downloaded from [url] on [date].
The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.
Name | Affiliation | |
---|---|---|
Gabriel Lara Ibarra | Senior Economist ELCPV | glaraibarra@worldbank.org |
Carolina Mejía-Mantilla | Senior Economist ELCPV | cmejiamantilla@worldbank.org |
DDI_DOM_2021_HFPS-W2_v02_M_WB
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Poverty Reduction and Policy Management Network (PREM) | World Bank | Metadata and data deposit |
Development Data Group | World Bank | Documentation of the study |
2023-01-12
Version 02 (2023-01-12)
Metadata updated to include a new cleaner version of the COVID-19 LAC High Frequency Phone Surveys 2021 Wave 2 data and documentation. Version update includes: a) For the (casos) data: removal of variables containing all missing values that were created when modules were not applicable to the country. These variables should have been omitted from the previous version, they were dropped from the updated version; and b) For the supporting documents: removal of color coding used for proofreading questionnaires and modules and certain questions not implemented in the field; and a formatted version of the note describing the sampling procedure.