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    Home / Central Data Catalog / ETH_2003_WHS_V01_M / variable [F11]
central

World Health Survey 2003

Ethiopia, 2003
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Reference ID
ETH_2003_WHS_v01_M
Producer(s)
World Health Organization (WHO)
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
Study website
Created on
May 02, 2012
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
Page views
98375
Downloads
19
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  • Ethiopia-ID
  • WHS-Ethiopia_F2
  • WHS-Ethiopia_F3
  • WHS-Ethiopia_F4
  • WHS-Ethiopia_F5
  • WHS-Ethiopia_F6
  • WHS-Ethiopia_F7

Feel people were too interested (q6039)

Data file: WHS-Ethiopia_F5

Overview

Valid: 4496
Invalid: 442
Type: Discrete
Decimal: 2
Start: 1138
End: 1141
Width: 4
Range: -
Format:

Questions and instructions

Question pretext
During the last 12 months, have you experienced any of the following…
For the following questions, the interviewer must read out a series of symptoms and determine if the respondent had any of those symptoms in the last 12 months. The point of asking symptom-related questions is to screen those individuals who might have a specific health condition or disease. Because there could be a number of symptoms that characterise a given health condition, and because some symptoms may be common to different conditions, it is important that the interviewer probe for each symptom to see whether the respondent may have an active disease. It is also important that the time
period for the symptoms (in the last 12 months) be clearly understood by the respondent and not confused with other time frames used in this section such as "ever" and "the last 2 weeks". Confusion of the time frame may render results incomparable.
Literal question
A feeling that people were too interested in you or there was a plot to harm you?
Categories
Value Category
1 Yes
5 No
6 Do not know
Sysmiss
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.
Interviewer instructions
Patients with schizophrenia and related psychoses incorrectly attribute special significance to people, objects or events and are convinced that this special significance refers to them. They may believe that they are being observed, followed or being harmed in some way.
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