Application of randomized response techniques for investigating cannabis use by Spanish university students
Metadata
Show full item recordMateria
cannabis consumption complex surveys randomized response techniques
Date
2017-12-26Referencia bibliográfica
Cobo B, Rueda MM, López-Torrecillas F. Application of randomized response techniques for investigating cannabis use by Spanish university students. Int J Methods Psychiatr Res. 2017 Dec;26(4):e1517. doi: 10.1002/mpr.1517.
Sponsorship
Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte; Consejería de Economía, Innovación, Ciencia y EmpleoAbstract
Cannabis is the most widely used illicit drug in developed countries, and has a significant
impact on mental and physical health in the general population. Although the evaluation
of levels of substance use is difficult, a method such as the randomized response
technique (RRT), which includes both a personal component and an assurance of
confidentiality, provides a combination which can achieve a considerable degree of
accuracy. Various RRT surveys have been conducted to measure the prevalence of drug
use, but to date no studies have been made of the effectiveness of this approach in
surveys with respect to quantitative variables related to drug use.
This paper describes a probabilistic, stratified sample of 1146 university students asking
sensitive quantitative questions about cannabis use in Spanish universities, conducted
using the RRT.
On comparing the results of the direct question (DQ) survey and those of the randomized
response (RR) survey, we find that the number of cannabis cigarettes consumed during
the past year (DQ: 3, RR: 17 aproximately), and the number of days when consumption
took place (DQ: 1, RR: 7) are much higher with RRT.
The advantages of RRT, reported previously and corroborated in our study, make it a
useful method for investigating cannabis use.