Publication | Closed Access
Fixed-Choice and Open-Ended Response Formats: A Comparison from HIV Prevention Research in Zimbabwe
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Citations
14
References
2004
Year
Healthcare ProvisionOpen-ended Response FormatsSocial SciencesZimbabwean WomenContraceptionPreventive MedicineHealth CommunicationGender StudiesPublic HealthHiv Prevention ResearchTransactional SexHiv Intervention StudyCommercial SexEpidemiological OutcomeDisease PreventionSexual BehaviorSexual HealthTreatment And PreventionGlobal HealthSociologyFixed-choice Question FormatsHuman SexualitySurvey Methodology
This article examined similarities and differences in responses to open-ended and fixed-choice question formats gathered from Zimbabwean women participating in an HIV intervention study ( n = 227). Specifically, the authors compared the responses of women to two questions (one open-ended and one fixed-choice) about male condom negotiation strategies used with their partners. Comparisons across formats revealed that the definitions of negotiation categories coded from openended responses overlapped only moderately with categories used for the fixed-choice checklist. Fixed-choice reports of negotiation strategies were not statistically associated with reported condom use, but a statistically significant association was obtained with a category derived from open-ended questions. Although these results may be specific to this study and its specific study question, the data suggest that asking key study questions in both open-ended and fixed-choice formats may provide a valuable form of perspective for social and behavioral data.
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