Recruiting migrant workers in Australia for Public Health surveys: how sampling strategy make a difference in estimates of workplace hazards

Abstract Objectives One third of the Australian work force are immigrants. Relatively little is known about working conditions for specific migrant groups. The objectives of this paper are to describe and compare the sampling strategies used to recruit migrant workers from specific migrant groups wo...

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Main Authors: Alison Daly, Alison Reid
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:BMC Research Notes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-020-05320-x
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spelling doaj-9c8c274c2964481f9569e15f37c6900a2020-11-25T02:45:43ZengBMCBMC Research Notes1756-05002020-10-011311510.1186/s13104-020-05320-xRecruiting migrant workers in Australia for Public Health surveys: how sampling strategy make a difference in estimates of workplace hazardsAlison Daly0Alison Reid1School of Public Health, Curtin UniversitySchool of Public Health, Curtin UniversityAbstract Objectives One third of the Australian work force are immigrants. Relatively little is known about working conditions for specific migrant groups. The objectives of this paper are to describe and compare the sampling strategies used to recruit migrant workers from specific migrant groups working in Australia into a cross-sectional study designed to produce population estimates of workplace hazards and self-reported health. Results Two cross sectional telephone surveys were conducted with immigrants currently working in Australia. Survey 1 used quota sampling from lists provided by a sample broker. Survey 2 used a combination of probability and non-probability sampling, including random sampling from telephone lists. Data from the surveys were weighted and comparisons made with unweighted data. While weighting adjusted for most differences across the sample sources, the likelihood of exposure to workplace hazards depended on exposure types and sampling strategies. We concluded that by using a combination of sampling strategies it is possible to recruit immigrants from specific migrant groups and provide a balanced view of working conditions, although no one strategy was best for all types of measures. Access to a robust sample source for migrants would enable a better perspective to migrant populations’ working conditions.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-020-05320-xMigrant workersCross-sectional surveysSamplingMethods
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alison Daly
Alison Reid
spellingShingle Alison Daly
Alison Reid
Recruiting migrant workers in Australia for Public Health surveys: how sampling strategy make a difference in estimates of workplace hazards
BMC Research Notes
Migrant workers
Cross-sectional surveys
Sampling
Methods
author_facet Alison Daly
Alison Reid
author_sort Alison Daly
title Recruiting migrant workers in Australia for Public Health surveys: how sampling strategy make a difference in estimates of workplace hazards
title_short Recruiting migrant workers in Australia for Public Health surveys: how sampling strategy make a difference in estimates of workplace hazards
title_full Recruiting migrant workers in Australia for Public Health surveys: how sampling strategy make a difference in estimates of workplace hazards
title_fullStr Recruiting migrant workers in Australia for Public Health surveys: how sampling strategy make a difference in estimates of workplace hazards
title_full_unstemmed Recruiting migrant workers in Australia for Public Health surveys: how sampling strategy make a difference in estimates of workplace hazards
title_sort recruiting migrant workers in australia for public health surveys: how sampling strategy make a difference in estimates of workplace hazards
publisher BMC
series BMC Research Notes
issn 1756-0500
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Objectives One third of the Australian work force are immigrants. Relatively little is known about working conditions for specific migrant groups. The objectives of this paper are to describe and compare the sampling strategies used to recruit migrant workers from specific migrant groups working in Australia into a cross-sectional study designed to produce population estimates of workplace hazards and self-reported health. Results Two cross sectional telephone surveys were conducted with immigrants currently working in Australia. Survey 1 used quota sampling from lists provided by a sample broker. Survey 2 used a combination of probability and non-probability sampling, including random sampling from telephone lists. Data from the surveys were weighted and comparisons made with unweighted data. While weighting adjusted for most differences across the sample sources, the likelihood of exposure to workplace hazards depended on exposure types and sampling strategies. We concluded that by using a combination of sampling strategies it is possible to recruit immigrants from specific migrant groups and provide a balanced view of working conditions, although no one strategy was best for all types of measures. Access to a robust sample source for migrants would enable a better perspective to migrant populations’ working conditions.
topic Migrant workers
Cross-sectional surveys
Sampling
Methods
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-020-05320-x
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