Nigeria - Cross River HDSS INDEPTH Core Dataset 2017 (Release 2019)
Reference ID | INDEPTH.NG021.CMD2017.v1 |
Year | 2013 - 2017 |
Country | Nigeria |
Producer(s) |
Martin M. Meremikwu - University of Calabar Iwara I. Arikpo - University of Calabar |
Sponsor(s) | University of Calabar - UNICAL - Core personnel and infrastructural funding International Development Research Centre Canada - IDRC - Setup grant and capacity building Tertiary Education Trust Fund - TETFund - Nested studies |
Collection(s) | |
Metadata | Documentation in PDF |
Created on
Jul 01, 2019
Last modified
Jul 01, 2019
Page views
57238
Data Collection
Data Collection Dates
Start | End | Cycle |
---|---|---|
2013-01-01 | 2017-12-31 | Release coverage |
Time Periods
Start | End | Cycle |
---|---|---|
2013-07-15 | Round 1 (Rural) | |
2014-03-21 | Round 2 (Rural) | |
2014-09-16 | Round 3 (Rural) | |
2015-03-23 | Round 4 (Rural) | |
2013-10-22 | Round 1 (Urban) | |
2014-06-03 | Round 2 (Urban) | |
2014-11-03 | Round 3 (Urban) | |
2015-09-30 | Round 4 (Urban) | |
2016-05-30 | Round 5 (Rural & Urban) |
Data Collection Mode
Proxy Respondent [proxy]
Data Collection Notes
Field workers visit each household for event during each update round. Data collection is predominantly paperless (using mobile tools).
Questionnaires
Household listing form
Baseline census form
Pregnancy form
Birth Registration form
Inmigration form
Outmigration form
Under-5 Child form
Socioeconomic indicators form
Death form
Verbal autopsy (Neonates, Child & Adult) forms
Marriage form
Social group form
Vacinnation form
Visit form
Data Collectors
Name | Abbreviation | Affiliation |
---|---|---|
Cross River HDSS | CRHDSS | University of Calabar |
Supervision
The CRHDSS operates a 3-level data collection supervision method. At first level, the field workers are on daily basis being supervised by enumerator supervisors (who have higher college training with over 6 years in data collection procedures. They work with the field workers daily and report to the field supervisor and field manager.
The field supervisors provide the second level supervision. The supervisors are graduate students with training in Health Informatics. They visit the field at random to supervise and monitor the progress of field work. They address field challenges and report to the field manager issues requiring urgent attention.
The Centre Director, Site leader, Field epidemiologist, and other scientific board members provide the third and hihest level of supervision. Occasionally, they visit the field to assess the progress made during the round and also observe the approach and commitment of other junior field staff.