Source:
World Health Organization, Regional Office for Europe
Date Published:
7/29/2020
Format:
PDF
Annotation:This 42-page document provides guidance to Member States in the WHO European Region that wish to conduct behavioral insights studies related to COVID-19. This tool is evidence-informed; can be regularly applied; is flexible to adjust to the changing situation; and follows high ethical standards....[See more] [See less]
Annotation:The purpose of this COVID-19 survey is to facilitate a rapid research response to the COVID-19 pandemic that will describe the affected population of frontline workers, their vulnerabilities, and their most urgent needs; and identify critical unmet needs and compare across geographic areas, types of facilities, job types, and sociodemographic characteristics.
Population: Adult Workers Length: 80 questions Time to Complete: 15-20 minutes Mode of Administration: Online (e.g., computer-assisted interview)
Pen and Paper
Telephone Administered by: Self Administered Language(s): English, Spanish
Annotation:The purpose of this study is to understand the spread of the COVID-19 and the impact on patients with cancer. Specifically, we want to understand how COVID-19 has impacted patient's lives and their cancer care. The objective is to enhance our knowledge of the evolving COVID-19 pandemic among patients with cancer. The data collected in this survey will help to understand how cancer care is being affected for patients with cancer and potential ways to mitigate this impact.
Population: Adults Only Length: 74 Questions Time to Complete: 5-10 minutes Mode of Administration: Face-to-face
Online (e.g., computer-assisted interview)
Pen and Paper
Telephone Administered by: Lay Interviewer
Professional Interviewer
Self Administered
Specialist/Doctor/Expert
Trained Lay Examiner/Interviewer Language(s): English, Spanish, Vietnamese
Source:
National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center (NACC)
Date Published:
7/2/2020
Format:
PDF
Annotation:The COVID-19 Impact Survey was used to gather data on the effect of the pandemic on participants enrolled in the clinical cores of the National Institute on Aging (NIA) Alzheimer's Disease Research Centers, a population of mostly older Americans with cognitive status ranging from normal to mild cognitive impairment to dementia (resulting from Alzheimer's disease and a range of other etiologies). An additional survey was created for the co-participants.
Questions Adapted From: N/A Population: Adults Only Length: 21 questions for the participant, 10 for the co-participant Time to Complete: 15 minutes for participant, 10 minutes for co-participant Mode of Administration: Face-to-face
Online (e.g., computer-assisted interview)
Pen and Paper
Telephone Administered by: Self Administered
Specialist/Doctor/Expert
Trained Lay Examiner/Interviewer Language(s): English
Contact Information: National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center, Elizabeth Robichaud, naccmail@uw.edu
Survey originally developed by the ADRC Clinical Task Force, Allan Levey, MD, PhD, Chair
Includes Research Tools:
Yes.
ID:23179. From: Disaster Lit®a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
Annotation:As a longitudinal study with rich measurement across a large number of social, health, and economic domains, the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) was designed to capture the impact of unexpected societal events, even without additional measurement specific to the event. To complement these longitudinal measures, HRS has developed several areas of content specifically in response to the coronavirus pandemic designed to dovetail with existing assessment. Information on lifestyle and psychosocial functioning is collected through a self-administered questionnaire (SAQ). Additional questions in the psychosocial SAQ were added to the 2020 wave of data collection. These questions obtain information on lifestyle, personal relationships, work, and feelings in response to the pandemic. These questions cover five subtopics: 1) pandemic-specific concerns related to health, finances, friends and family, and the future; 2) changes in social contact with family and friends, including social support given and received and changes in relationship quality; 3) impact on activities, including pandemic-specific behaviors such as wearing a mask, washing hands, social distancing, and using hand sanitizer; 4) additional questions about work status that indicate if the respondent was an essential worker and whether or not they could work at home during the pandemic; and 5) emotional well-being, resilience, and coping during the pandemic.
Population: Adults only Length: 78 questions Mode of Administration: Pen and Paper Administered by: Self Administered Language(s): English
Source:
Johns Hopkins University, Bloomberg School of Public Health
Date Published:
6/20/2020
Format:
PDF
Annotation:This set of questionnaires was used in a supplemental mail study of the National Health and Aging Trends Study (NHATS) conducted in 2020. The questionnaires aim to assess experiences during the COVID-19 outbreak of: 1) NHATS participants (ages 70 and older) and 2) the up to two adult family members and friends who helped NHATS participants the most during the outbreak. Two types of mail questionnaires were administered: 1) questionnaires designed for NHATS participants or their proxy respondents (SP / proxy) and 2) questionnaires designed for adult family members and friends (FF) who helped NHATS participants. The SP questionnaires includes 13 sections. Topics cover symptoms of COVID-19, measures taken to limit spread of the virus, and changes during the pandemic in the NHATS participants' living situation, contact with family and friends, productive activities (e.g., work, volunteering, caregiving), grocery shopping, health care, finances, wellbeing and daily activities. Participants were also asked to provide contact information for the two adult family members or friends who helped most during the outbreak. The FF questionnaire includes 17 sections, many of which align with the sections in the SP/Proxy questionnaires. In addition, the FF questionnaire asks about the FF's relationship with the NHATS participant, help given to the NHATS participant before and during the outbreak and reasons for helping. For those who helped for health or functioning reasons, three additional sections about caregiving are included: time spent helping the NHATS participant, dementia caregiving (if help is memory related) and helping challenges and supports.
Questions Adapted From: Symptoms of COVID-19 module (questions 5-9 in SP/proxy questionnaire and 15-19 in FF questionnaire) is adapted from MESA, common symptom questions are adapted from CDC definitions; Measures to Limit Spread of COVID-19 questions (question 12 in SP/proxy questionnaire and 22 in FF questionnaire) are adapted from MESA; Questions 13-16 on assisted Living in SP questionnaire is adapted based on AHCA guidance; Questions 17, 18, 21, and 22 in SP/Proxy questionnaire aligned with items in the HRS COVID telephone module; Questions 27-28 in SP/Proxy questionnaire and 50-51 in FF questionnaire aligned with HRS COVID SAQ; Questions 29-30 in SP/Proxy questionnaire aligned with HRS COVID SAQ and life space constriction items in the simplified version of Stalvey et al. (1999); Questions 33-34 in the SP/Proxy questionnaire aligned with content in NHATS. Questions 35-36 in the SP/Proxy questionnaire and 48 in the FF questionnaire aligned with HRS COVID SAQ; Questions 37-40 on changes in grocery shopping in the SP/Proxy questionnaire aligned with content in NHATS; Questions 41-45 on changes in health care in the SP/Proxy questionnaire are adapted from NSOC III (HC module) and HRS COVID telephone module; Question 46 in the SP/Proxy questionnaire and 29 in the FF questionnaire are adapted from HRS COVID telephone module; Questions 47-48 in the SP/Proxy questionnaire 30-31 in the FF questionnaire are adapted from PSID shutdown / COVID19 module; Questions 49-52 in the SP/Proxy questionnaire aligned with HRS COVID SAQ; Question 57 in the SP/Proxy questionnaire and 38 in the FF questionnaire are adapted from PTSD-8 (Hansen et al. 2010); Question 33 in the FF questionnaire aligned with PHQ2 and GAD in NHATS (HC); Question 53 in the SP/Proxy questionnaire and question 34 in the FF questionnaire aligned with NHATS (HC); Questions 60-69 on changes in daily activities in the SP/Proxy questionnaire aligned with NHATS (SC, MO, HA, DT, MC modules); Questions 32, 44, 49, 59-66, 71-76, and 78-79 in the FF questionnaire aligned with NSOC (HC, DI, AC, and CA module); Questions 53-58, and 67-70 in the FF questionnaire aligned with NHATS (SC, MO, HA, DT, MC, HA, and CP modules). References: Stalvey, B., Owsley, C., Sloane, M.E., Ball, K. (1999) The Life Space Questionnaire: A measure of the extent of mobility of older adults. Journal of Applied Gerontology 18: 479-498. Hansen, M., Andersen, T. E., Armour, C., Elklit, A., Palic, S., & Mackrill, T. (2010). PTSD-8: a short PTSD inventory. Clinical practice and epidemiology in mental health: CP & EMH, 6, 101. Population: Adults Only Length: 69 questions for the Sample Person (SP) Questionnaire, 63 questions for the Proxy Questionnaire, and 79 questions for the Family Members and Friends (FF) Questionnaire. Time to Complete: Approximately 20 minutes Mode of Administration: Pen and Paper Administered by: Self Administered Language(s): English (SP/proxy and FF questionnaires), Spanish (SP questionnaire)...[See more] [See less]
Contact Information: Vicki A. Freedman, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, vfreedma@umich.edu; Judith Kasper, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, jkasper1@jhu.edu.
Includes Research Tools:
Yes.
ID:24245. From: Disaster Lit®a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
Source:
University of Illinois at Chicago, School of Public Health
Date Published:
6/18/2020
Format:
PDF
Annotation:This tool was developed to measure experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic among South African adolescent girls (ages 15-19 years) and their mothers/caregivers within the IMARA (Informed, Motivated, Aware and Responsible Adolescents and Adults) study. It addresses psychological experiences (e.g., stress) and coping strategies, as well as effects of COVID-19 on mother-daughter relationships, living situations, sexual risk behaviors (e.g., frequency of sexual intercourse, drug/alcohol use), and health practices (e.g., adherence to medication). It is designed to be completed via self-report, either in person or over the telephone.
Questions Adapted From: -Q1 is from the COVID-19 Exposure and Family Impact Survey (CEFIS), developed by The Center for Pediatric Traumatic Stress
-Qs 2-12 are adapted from the COVID-19 Questionnaire Child Self-Report Primary Version, Environmental Influences on Child Health Population: Adults and Teens Length: 23 questions Time to Complete: 7-8 minutes Mode of Administration: Online (e.g., computer-assisted interview)
Telephone Administered by: Trained Lay Examiner/Interviewer Language(s): English; Xhosa
Annotation:This document is the protocol for the "Collaborating Consortium of Cohorts Producing NIDA Opportunities (C3PNO) Survey of COVID-19 Risks/Effects, Substance Use, and HIV/AIDS Survey" (https://dr2.nlm.nih.gov/search/?q=22690). The protocol provides the background, study design, preliminary studies, recruitment and participant sampling, study procedures, data collection and measurements, and analytic strategy....[See more] [See less]
Source:
Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC)
Date Published:
6/5/2020
Format:
Text
Annotation:
The Vanderbilt Child Health COVID-19 Poll was fielded from June 5 to June 10, 2020, using the Ipsos KnowledgePanel, a large online research panel created using probability-based address sampling of U.S. households. Households without internet at the time of recruitment were provided with an internet-enabled tablet. Participants in KnowledgePanel receive nominal periodic incentives to participate. For this survey, we included parents in KnowledgePanel with at least one child in the household younger than 18 years old. Eligible participants were randomly selected from the standing panel, sent an email notification, and sent a subsequent reminder three days later. This survey had a 50% completion rate, with a total of 1,011 responses. Survey weights were designed to provide national estimates of parents with children less than 18 years of age, accounting for differential nonresponse. Benchmarks for survey weighting were obtained from the 2019 March Supplement of the Current Population Survey for all variables, except for language proficiency, which was obtained from the 2018 American Community Survey.
Questions Adapted From: Questions on food security (Q1, Q4), enrollment in food assistance programs (Q2, Q5), and health insurance (Q3, Q6) were adapted from the National Survey of Children's Health. Population: Adults Only Length: 14 questions Time to Complete: 10 minutes Mode of Administration: Online (e.g., computer-assisted interview) Administered by: Self Administered Special Considerations: Households without internet at the time of recruitment were provided with an internet-enabled tablet. Language(s): English
Citation:
Well-being of Parents and Children During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A National Survey
Stephen W. Patrick, Laura E. Henkhaus, Joseph S. Zickafoose, Kim Lovell, Alese Halvorson, Sarah Loch, Mia Letterie, Matthew M. Davis
Pediatrics Jul 2020, e2020016824; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2020-016824. https://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/146/4/e2020016824?cct=2287
Available Formats: Text
Contact Information:
Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH, MS
Director, Vanderbilt Center for Child Health Policy
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Stephen.patrick@vumc.org
Survey conducted by:
Ipsos
Global Market Research and Public Opinion Specialist https://www.ipsos.com/en
Includes Research Tools:
Yes.
ID:23255. From: Disaster Lit®a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
Source:
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC)
Date Published:
6/2020
Format:
PDF
Annotation:The COVID-19 and Telemental Health Service Use Survey was developed to help researchers and clinicians better understand how COVID-19 has affected the mental health of respondents, and their telemental health service use. Telemental health services include the use of voice call, video call, text messaging, mobile app, web-based formats (e.g., website, email), internet support group, or chat room to receive mental health treatment or counseling. The Institutional Review Board of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill provided the study a notification of exemption from further review (IRB Study #20-1588).
Population: Adults Only Length: 26 items Time to Complete: 8 minutes Mode of Administration: Online (e.g., computer-assisted interview) Administered by: Self Administered Language(s): English