z-logo
Premium
“Which Box Should I Check?”: Examining Standard Check Box Approaches to Measuring Race and Ethnicity
Author(s) -
Eisenhower Abbey,
Suyemoto Karen,
Lucchese Fernanda,
Canenguez Katia
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
health services research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.706
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 1475-6773
pISSN - 0017-9124
DOI - 10.1111/1475-6773.12132
Subject(s) - ethnic group , race (biology) , statistics , medicine , econometrics , computer science , gerontology , demography , mathematics , sociology , gender studies , anthropology
Objective This study examined methodological concerns with standard approaches to measuring race and ethnicity using the federally defined race and ethnicity categories, as utilized in National Institutes of Health ( NIH ) funded research. Data Sources/Study Setting Surveys were administered to 219 economically disadvantaged, racially and ethnically diverse participants at Boston Women Infants and Children ( WIC ) clinics during 2010. Study Design We examined missingness and misclassification in responses to the closed‐ended NIH measure of race and ethnicity compared with open‐ended measures of self‐identified race and ethnicity. Principal Findings Rates of missingness were 26 and 43 percent for NIH race and ethnicity items, respectively, compared with 11 and 18 percent for open‐ended responses. NIH race responses matched racial self‐identification in only 44 percent of cases. Missingness and misclassification were disproportionately higher for self‐identified Latina(o)s, African‐Americans, and Cape Verdeans. Race, but not ethnicity, was more often missing for immigrant versus mainland U.S.‐born respondents. Results also indicated that ethnicity for Hispanic/Latina(o)s is more complex than captured in this measure. Conclusions The NIH 's current race and ethnicity measure demonstrated poor differentiation of race and ethnicity, restricted response options, and lack of an inclusive ethnicity question. Separating race and ethnicity and providing respondents with adequate flexibility to identify themselves both racially and ethnically may improve valid operationalization.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here