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1
Translate Wisely! An Evaluation of Close and Adaptive Translation Procedures in an Experiment Involving Questionnaire Translation
In: International journal of sociology ; 51 ; 2 ; 135-162 (2022)
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Warum wir so wenig über die Sprachen in Deutschland wissen: Spracheinstellungen als Erkenntnisbarriere
In: Diskurs Kindheits- und Jugendforschung / Discourse. Journal of Childhood and Adolescence Research ; 16 ; 4 ; 403-419 ; Perspektiven von Kindern und Jugendlichen auf sprachliche Diversität und Sprachbildungsprozesse (2021)
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3
Afterword: Future Directions in Multinational, Multiregional, and Multicultural (3MC) Survey Research
In: The essential role of language in survey research ; 243-256 (2021)
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Health monitoring among asylum seekers and refugees: a state-wide, cross-sectional, population-based study in Germany
In: Emerging Themes in Epidemiology ; 16 ; 1-21 (2021)
Abstract: Background: Health monitoring in Germany falls short on generating timely, reliable and representative data among migrants, especially transient and marginalized groups such as asylum seekers and refugees (ASR). We aim to advance current health monitoring approaches and obtain reliable estimates on health status and access to essential healthcare services among ASR in Germany’s third largest federal state, Baden-Württemberg. Methods: We conducted a state-wide, cross-sectional, population-based health monitoring survey in nine languages among ASR and their children in collective accommodation centres in 44 districts. Questionnaire items capturing health status, access to care, and sociodemographic variables were taken from established surveys and translated using a team approach. Random sampling on the level of 1938 accommodation centres with 70,634 ASR was employed to draw a balanced sample of 65 centres with a net sample of 1% of the state's ASR population. Multilingual field teams recruited eligible participants using a "door-to-door" approach. Parents completed an additional questionnaire on behalf of their children. Results: The final sample comprised 58 centres with 1843 ASR. Of the total sample expected eligible (N = 987), 41.7% (n = 412) participated in the survey. Overall, 157 households had children and received a children’s questionnaire; 61% (n = 95) of these were returned. Age, sex, and nationality of the included sample were comparable to the total population of asylum applicants in Germany. Adults reported longstanding limitations (16%), bad/very bad general health (19%), pain (25%), chronic illness (40%), depression (46%), and anxiety (45%). 52% utilised primary and 37% specialist care services in the previous 12 months, while reporting unmet needs for primary (31%) and specialist care (32%). Younger and male participants had above-average health status and below-average utilisation compared to older and female ASR. Conclusions: Our health monitoring survey yielded reliable estimates on health status and health care access among ASR, revealing relevant morbidities and patterns of care. Applying rigorous epidemiological methods in linguistically diverse, transient and marginalized populations is challenging, but feasible. Integration of this approach into state- and nation-wide health monitoring strategies is needed in order to sustain this approach as a health planning tool.
Keyword: 50100; anthropology; Asylbewerber; asylum seeker; Baden-Württemberg; Bundesrepublik Deutschland; cross-sectional study; Epidemiologie; epidemiology; Federal Republic of Germany; Flüchtling; Fragebogen; Gesundheitspolitik; Gesundheitsversorgung; Gesundheitswesen; Gesundheitszustand; health care; health care delivery system; Health monitoring; Health Policy; health status; Healthcare access; Healthcare planning; Healthcare quality; Monitoring; Querschnittuntersuchung; questionnaire; refugee; Social sciences; sociology; Sozialwissenschaften; Soziologie; survey research; Umfrageforschung
URL: https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/71115
http://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-71115-9
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12982-019-0085-2
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5
Multi-mode question pretesting: Using traditional cognitive interviews and online testing as complementary methods
In: Survey Methods: Insights from the Field ; 1-14 ; Advancements in Online and Mobile Survey Methods (2021)
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6
Assessing the use of back translation: the shortcomings of back translation as a quality testing method
In: International Journal of Social Research Methodology ; 20 ; 6 ; 573-584 (2021)
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7
Integration of Migrant Populations into Health Monitoring in Germany: Results from a Feasibility Study
In: Survey Methods: Insights from the Field ; 1-11 ; Probability and Nonprobability Sampling: Sampling of hard-to-reach survey populations (2019)
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8
Language Barriers during the Fieldwork of the IAB-BAMF-SOEP Survey of Refugees in Germany
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 75-84 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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9
The Development of a Research Programme to Translate and Test the Personal Well-being Questions in Sylheti and Urdu
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 13-27 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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10
Surveying Immigrants: The Role of Language Attrition and Language Change in the Application of Questionnaires
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 95-105 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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11
Linguistic and Cultural Aspects in Migrant Surveys: Introduction and Overview
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 5-12 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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12
Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues
In: 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 108 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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13
The Place of Expert Review in Translation and Questionnaire Evaluation for Hard-to-Count Populations in National Surveys
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 29-41 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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14
Translating Answers to Open-ended Survey Questions in Cross-cultural Research: A Case Study on the Interplay between Translation, Coding, and Analysis
In: Field Methods ; 27 ; 3 ; 284-299 (2018)
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15
A Comparison of Two Cognitive Pretesting Techniques Supported by Eye Tracking
In: Social Science Computer Review ; 34 ; 5 ; 582-596 (2018)
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16
Respondents' ratings of expressions from response scales: a two-country, two-language investigation on equivalence and translation
In: Cross-cultural survey equivalence ; 3 ; ZUMA-Nachrichten Spezial ; 159-184 (2017)
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17
Developing a low-cost technique for parallel cross-cultural instrument development: the Question Appraisal System (QAS-04)
In: Methodological aspects in cross-national research ; 11 ; ZUMA-Nachrichten Spezial ; 31-46 (2016)
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18
Text and context: challenges to comparability in survey questions
In: Methodological aspects in cross-national research ; 11 ; ZUMA-Nachrichten Spezial ; 95-107 (2016)
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19
Übersetzungsprobleme in der interkulturellen Befragung
In: interculture journal: Online-Zeitschrift für interkulturelle Studien ; 8 ; 10 ; 61-78 ; Probleme empirischer Kulturforschung (2015)
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20
The impact of item readability on the endorsement of the midpoint response in surveys
In: Survey Research Methods ; 1 ; 2 ; 69-74 (2015)
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