April 1999 Microdata File Description
Prepared: September 7, 2000
Revised/Updated: February 20, 2001Logical record length of
ASCII file added.
June 29, 2001Survey month corrected from August to April 1999.
Technical Description
The April 1999 CPS Food Security Supplement microdata file is
provided on CD-ROM in ASCII format, or can be downloaded via
the DataFerrett system
in SAS transport (version 5) or ASCII format. The CD-ROM data file
consists of 134,951 logical records. The length of each record
is
1,134 characters. Each record in the CD-ROM file represents one
person who was eligible for the core labor force survey. Noninterview
households are included in the CD-ROM file with their noninterview
status indicated.
The DataFerrett system files
do not include noninterview households (but do include interviewed
households with supplement data missing).
Data files downloaded from DataFerrett, therefore, exclude noninterview
households and consist of 121,178 records.
A subset of variables on each record contains data about the household
of which the person is a part. These variables have the same value
for all people in the same interview household.
Contents of the Data File
The file includes data in three general categories:
(1) Monthly labor force survey data and recodes, collected by the
Census Bureau for the Bureau of Labor Statistics. These variables
are described briefly in the data dictionary. For concepts and definitions
underlying these data, users should refer to the technical documentation
for the CPS monthly labor force data available from the Bureau of
Labor Statistics. Included are geographic, demographic, income,
and employment data that may be of interest to those analyzing the
Food Security Supplement.
(2) Food Security Supplement data, collected by the Census Bureau
for the United States Department of Agriculture. These data consist
of answers by household respondents to questions about household
food expenditures, use of food assistance programs, and experiences
and behaviors related to food security, food insecurity, and hunger.
All of the Food Security Supplement variables are household-level
data except the supplement person weight, the food security status
person weight, and the identifier for the focus child for individually
referenced children in rotation 8.
(3) Food security and hunger scale and status indicators calculated
from the Food Security Supplement data by the Economic Research
Service of the United States Department of Agriculture. These indicate
the screening status of the household as well as continuous and
categorical measures of food security status.
Contents of the Food Security Supplement QuestionnaireA facsimile of the Food Security Supplement questionnaire is
available on the ERS website or on the public-use data file CD-ROM
available from the Census Bureau. The major sections of the Food
Security Supplement are as follows:
(1) Food Spending and Program Participation (HES1 - HESP9).
(2) Food Sufficiency and Food Security (HESS1 - HESSH5A). This
section includes the 18 food security and hunger items used to calculate
the household food security scale.
(3) Ways of Avoiding or Ameliorating Food Deprivation - Coping
Strategies (HESC1 - HESC4).
(4) Minimum Food Spending Needed (HES10)
Changes from Previous Years' Food Security SupplementsThe 1999 Food Security Supplement was almost unchanged from
1998. (Note, however, that the 1998 and 1999 files differ substantially
from 1995-97 files, especially in regard to the order of the main
food security items and screening of those items to reduce respondent
burden. The main series of questions was reordered in 1998 to approximate
the severity order of the items and renamed to reflect the new questionnaire
structure. The reordering allowed insertion of two internal screens
and a less stringent initial screen, which is described below.)
Other innovations in 1998 that were continued in 1999 included
(1) the split ballot test of individually referenced questions (described
below); (2) the expanded set of "how often did this occur?"
followup questions to the main food security and hunger series;
and (3) the final question which asks the respondent what would
be the lowest amount the household could spend for food per week
or per month and still provide a healthy, acceptable diet.
Changes from 1998 include: (1) A series of questions on food spending
at various kinds of places plus a followup asking about usual spending
for food, replaced the single "usual" household food expenditure
question asked in 1998 and in rotations 1-7 of 1997. The 1999 series
was similar to that used in 1996 and in rotation 8 in 1997. (2)
A split ballot test of two forms of the USDA/NHANES food sufficiency
questions (HESS1 and HESS1A/HESS1A1) replaced a different test carried
out in 1998.
Screening of the Food Security Supplement
The Food Security Supplement includes several screens to reduce
respondent burden and to avoid embarrassing respondents by asking
them questions that are inappropriate given other information which
they have provided in the survey. Some of the screener variables
use information from the monthly labor force core data as well as
from the Food Security Supplement. Households with income above
185 percent of the poverty threshold for that household (HRPOOR=2,
estimated from HUFAMINC and HRNUMHOU) who responded "no"
to HES2 were skipped over the questions on participation in food
assistance programs. Households with income above 185 percent of
poverty who registered no indication of food stress on HES2, HESS1,
or HESS1A/HESS1A1 were skipped over the rest of the "Food Sufficiency
and Food Security" section and the "Ways of Avoiding or
Ameliorating Food Deprivation" section. There are also two
"internal" screeners in the main food security section
(the questions used to calculate the household food security scale).
This series of questions is divided into three blocks. After the
first and second blocks, households which have registered no indication
of food stress in the preceding block are skipped over the rest
of the "Food Sufficiency and Food Security" section.
The screening rules that determine whether a household was asked
the questions used to calculate the food security scale have varied
somewhat during the first 5 years of fielding the Food Security
Supplement. These different screening procedures biased estimated
prevalences of food insecurity and hunger differently in each year.
Adjustments must be made for these differences to compare prevalences
of food security and hunger across years. This topic is discussed
further below under the heading "Food Security Scales and Screener
Variables."
Screeners also were applied based on whether the household included
any children, so that households without children were not asked
questions that refer specifically to children. This screener, as
calculated at the time of the survey, classified as children all
persons age 17 or younger. However, for processing and analyzing
the food security data, persons who are household reference persons
or spouses of household reference persons (PERRP=1, 2, or 3) are
not considered children even if they are 17 or younger. The food
security scale, status, and screener variables reflect this recoding;
however, the individual item responses are not recoded, and the
user will need to recode these if they are to be analyzed or used
to replicate scale scores.
Experimental, Individually Referenced Questions
Continuing the split-ballot test first conducted in 1998, households
in HRMIS=8 were asked several food security questions referenced
to the respondent or to a specific child in place of corresponding
questions in other month-in-sample groups referred either to all
adults or all children in the household. Adult items normally asked
of "you or other adults in the household" in multiple-adult
households were referenced only to the respondent. Selected items
that are normally asked of "the children" in multiple-child
households were asked of a specific focus child in these households.
The selection of the focus child was randomized with respect to
characteristics of interest based on which child's birthday was
nearest to the date of interview. As a lead-in to the first such
question, the respondent was advised, "The next questions ask
about a particular child living in the household, that is, (CHILD'S
NAME)." In subsequent questions, the child's name was inserted
as a referent. Because these questions refer to specific individuals,
and not to the experience of all members of the household, it is
not possible to calculate scale scores for these households that
are precisely comparable with those of other households. For this
reason, these households are assigned missing values on food security
scale and status variables, and an adjusted set of weights is provided
to account for their exclusion (see section on weighting below).
The focus child in households in rotation 8 is identified by the
variable PRSCHILD.
Food Security Scales and Screener Variables
The main purpose of the Food Security Supplement is to provide information
about food security, food insecurity, and hunger in the nations
households. Several variables are provided in the data file to identify
the food security status of each household during the previous 12
months. All of these variables are based on responses to a set of
18 items in the supplement that are indicators of food insecurity
and hunger. HRFS12M3 is the raw scorea count of the number
of items affirmed by the household respondent. HRFS12M4 is the household
food security scale score, a continuous score based on fitting the
data to a single-parameter Rasch model. Computed values range from
about 1 to 14. Scale scores for households that affirmed no items
cannot be calculated within the Rasch model. These households are
food secure, but the degree of their food security is not known,
and may vary widely from household to household. They are assigned
scale scores of -6 to remind users that they require special handling
in analyses that assume linearity of the scale scores. HRFS12M1
is a categorical variable based on the scale score, which classifies
households in three categories: food secure, food insecure without
hunger, and food-insecure-with-hunger. HRFS12M2 is the same as HRFS12M1
except that the food-insecure-with-hunger category is subdivided
to level 1 and level 2 hunger. The level 2 hunger category corresponds
with the severe hunger category described in Household Food Security
in the United States: Summary Report of the food security measurement
project, published by the Food and Nutrition Service.
The food security variables described in the previous
paragraph are based on the 18 food security indicator
items as they were administered in the 1999 survey. A
second set of food security scale and status indicators
are provided that are adjusted for interyear differences
in survey screening procedures. These "common-screen"
variables are comparable to corresponding variables in
earlier years data, and prevalence estimates based
on them are comparable across these years. The common-screen-based
food security variables are HRFS12C3 (raw score), HRFS12C4
(Rasch-based scale score), HRFS12C1 (three-category food
security status indicator), and HRFS12C2 (4-category food
security status indicator). The common-screen food security
variables are needed because the screening procedures
used in administering the Food Security Supplements varied
somewhat from year to year. In all years, households that
were screened out after a few initial questions are classified
as food secure. However, comparisons across years of the
item responses of households with identical responses
to the preliminary screener variables show that some households
that were screened out under more stringent screening
rules would have been classified as food insecure (or,
in a few cases, even as food-insecure-with-hunger) if
they had not been screened out. The screening procedures,
therefore, bias prevalence estimates of food security
and hunger downward, and the extent of the bias varies
across years. To compare prevalence rates across years,
it is essential to adjust the data from each year so that
it matches, as nearly as possible, a common set of screening
procedures. That is, negative responses must be imputed
to households that would have been screened out at the
initial screener in any year. For surveys prior to 1998,
negative responses also must be imputed to "downstream"
variables for households which would have been screened
out by either of the internal screens that were first
implemented in 1998.
Two screener status variables are provided. HRFS12MS refers to
screening status under the screen actually applied when the survey
was administered (the "maximum-sample screen.") The variable
indicates whether the household was screened out at the initial
screen (before the first of the 18 indicator items), or was screened
out after the first or second blocks of items, or was not screened
out and was asked all items. Households that were screened out after
the first block, but without having given a valid response to any
of the items in the block are coded as missing on HRFS12MS. Maximum-sample
food security scale and status variables (HRFS12M1, HRFS12M2, HRFS12M3,
HRFS12M4) for these households also are coded as missing.
HRFS12CS refers to screening status under the 1995-1999 common
screen. Categories are the same as for the maximum-sample screen
variable, and households that would have been screened out with no
valid responses to any of the indicator items under the common screen
are coded as missing. Common-screen food security scale and status
variables (HRFS12C1, HRFS12C2, HRFS12C3, HRFS12C4) for these households
are coded as missing.
Constructing Household Characteristics from Person Records
To compute some household characteristics such as household size,
presence of children, or presence of elderly, it is necessary to
identify the records of all persons in the same household. Households
are uniquely and completely identified by State of residence (GESTCEN),
household identifier (HRHHID), and household serial suffix (HSERSUF).
Sort records within households by PERRP if the household reference
person record must be the first record in the household. To match
to other months CPS files, add the HRMIS variable to the household
identification, adjusting one of the files for the difference in
survey month.
WeightsEstimating Population Distributions
of Person and Household CharacteristicsThe CPS is a complex probability sample, and interviewed households
as well as persons in those households are assigned weights so that
the full interviewed sample represents the total national non-institutionalized
population. Initial weights are assigned based on probability of
selection into the sample, and weights are then adjusted iteratively
to match population controls for selected demographic characteristics
at State and national levels. There are three sets of household
and person weights in this data file: (1) labor force survey weights,
(2) Food Security Supplement weights, and (3) food security status
weights.
The labor force survey weights, HWHHWGT for households and PWSSWGT
for persons, are positive for persons in all interviewed households.
These weights would be appropriate for analyzing whether households
or persons who completed the supplement differed from those who
declined to complete the supplement.
About 10 percent of households completed the core labor force survey
but declined to complete the Food Security Supplement. The supplement
weights, HHSUPWGT for households and PWSUPWGT for persons, are adjusted
for supplement nonresponse so that the supplement respondents represent
the national non-institutionalized population. These weights are
appropriate for estimating household distributions of variables
in the Food Security Supplement, except for food security status
or analyses including the food security status variables.
The food security status of households in rotation 8 with more
than one adult or more than one child cannot be determined in ways
comparable with those of other households because of the experimental,
individually referenced, questions administered to those households
(described above). Adjusted weights, HHFSWGT and PWFSWGT, are provided
for estimating food security and hunger prevalences and for analyses
that include the food security scales or food security status variables.
For households with one adult and not more than one child, these
food security status weights are identical to their supplement weight
counterparts. For households with more than one adult or more than
one child, the food security status weights are zero in rotation
8 and adjusted by a factor of approximately 8/7 for households in
rotations 1-7, so as to represent the same total population and
number of households as the core weights and supplement weights
do. This is a ratio adjustment, however, not an interative adjustment
to match controls for subpopulations or State populations.
Household weights are attached to all person records in the household.
To estimate household distributions, the sample must be limited
to one record for each household. This is usually accomplished by
limiting the sample to records of household reference persons (PERRP=1
or 2). Noninterview households and persons have negative weights
(-1), and these also must be excluded from analyses.
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